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NELI MURAKI ISHIKAWA
VALIDAÇÃO DO FACT-F NO BRASIL E AVALIAÇÃO DA FADIGA E QUALIDADE DE VIDA EM MULHERES
COM CÂNCER DE MAMA
Tese de Doutorado
ORIENTADOR: Profª. Drª. SOPHIE FRANÇOISE MAURICETTE DERCHAIN CO-ORIENTADOR: Prof. Dr. LUIZ CLAUDIO SANTOS THULER
Unicamp 2009
iii
NELI MURAKI ISHIKAWA
VALIDAÇÃO DO FACT-F NO BRASIL E AVALIAÇÃO DA FADIGA E QUALIDADE DE VIDA EM MULHERES
COM CÂNCER DE MAMA
Tese de Doutorado apresentada à Pós-Graduação da Faculdade de Ciências Médicas da Universidade Estadual de Campinas para obtenção do Título de Doutor em Tocoginecologia, área de Ciências Biomédicas.
ORIENTADOR: Profª. Drª. SOPHIE FRANÇOISE MAURICETTE DERCHAIN CO-ORIENTADOR: Prof. Dr. LUIZ CLAUDIO SANTOS THULER
Unicamp 2009
iv
FICHA CATALOGRÁFICA ELABORADA PELA BIBLIOTECA DA FACULDADE DE CIÊNCIAS MÉDICAS
UNICAMP Bibliotecário: Sandra Lúcia Pereira – CRB-8ª / 6044
Título em inglês: Validation of FACT-F in Brazil and evaluation of fadigue and quality of life in women with breast cancer Keywords: • Questionnaires
• Drug therapy • Quality of life • Fatigue • Reproducibility of results • Neoplasm, breast • Validation
Titulação: Doutor em Tocoginecologia Área de concentração: Ciências Biomédicas Banca examinadora:
Prof. Dr. Luiz Cláudio Santos Thuler Prof. Dr. Luis Otávio Zanatta Sarian Profa. Dra. Maria José Martins Duarte Osis Prof. Dr. Nivaldo Antonio Parizotto Profa. Dra. Telma Guarisi
Data da defesa: 16 – 01 – 2009 Diagramação e arte final: Assessoria Técnica do CAISM (ASTEC)
Ishikawa, Neli Muraki Is3v Validação do FACT – F no Brasil e avaliação da fadiga
e qualidade de vida em mulheres com câncer de mama / Neli Muraki Ishikawa. Campinas, SP : [s.n.], 2009.
Orientadores: Sophie Françoise Mauricette Derchain,
Luiz Cláudio Santos Thuler Tese (Doutorado) Universidade Estadual de
Campinas. Faculdade de Ciências Médicas. 1. Questionários. 2. Quimioterapia. 3. Qualidade de
vida. 4. Fadiga. 5. Reprodutibilidade dos testes. 6. Mamas – câncer. 7. Validação. I. Derchain, Sophie Françoise Mauricette. II. Thuler, Luiz Cláudio Santos. III. Universidade Estadual de Campinas. Faculdade de Ciências Médicas. IV. Título.
vii
Dedico este trabalho...
ao meu pai Soiti (in memoriam), a minha mãe Kimiko,
ao meu marido Edison, a minha filha Helena,
aos meus irmãos, aos pacientes,
e amigos.
ix
Agradecimentos
A Deus, por me dar a certeza de que sempre existe um caminho.
À Profª Drª Sophie Françoise Mauricette Derchain, a quem tenho como exemplo de amor à profissão e à arte de ensinar. Minha admiração e meus agradecimentos pelas orientações relevantes e disposição em me receber e ajudar ao longo deste estudo.
Ao Prof Dr Luiz Cláudio Santos Thuler, a quem tenho grande admiração por sua integridade pessoal, capacidade de trabalho, meus especiais agradecimentos pela sua valiosa orientação e ensinamentos no decorrer desses anos no INCA.
À Profª Drª Maria José Martins Duarte Osis e ao Prof Dr. Luis Otávio Zanatta Sarian, pelas críticas e sugestões no processo de qualificação.
Aos meus colaboradores deste estudo: Dra. Alessandra Grasso Giglio, Dra.Clarissa Seródio da Rocha Baldotto, Dr. Carlos José Coelho de Andrade, Dr. Luiz Guilherme Pinheiro Branco, e às enfermeiras Eli Yanase, Maria de Fátima Rodrigues B. Ventura, pela cooperação e concretização deste estudo, permitindo um trabalho em equipe.
A toda a equipe do Serviço de Oncologia e equipe de Enfermagem do Serviço de Oncologia Clínica e Quimioterappia do HC1 e HC3, pela colaboração na realização deste estudo.
Aos amigos do INCA que foram alunos do mestrado na UNICAMP, pelas boas lembranças, pelo bom convívio, pelo incentivo e apoio nessa caminhada pela pós-graduação na UNICAMP.
Ao Péricles Maranhão Neto pela revisão dos artigos da língua inglesa.
À estatística Sirlei Siani Morais pela revisão das análises estatísticas.
Ao Prof. Dr. Luiz Carlos Zeferino, pelo apoio na realização deste curso.
x
À Profª Drª Sheila Pereira da Silva e Souza, responsável anterior pela Coordenação de Ensino e Divulgação Científica (CEDC), do Instituto Nacional de Câncer (INCA), uma das mentoras da reunião de duas renomadas instituições de assistência / ensino / pesquisa.
Aos Professores-Doutores José Gomes Temporão e Luiz Antônio Santini Rodrigues da Silva, antigo e atual Diretor Geral do INCA, pelo cumprimento da política de ampliação dos quadros de mestres e doutores, e apoio na realização deste trabalho.
À Profª Drª Marisa Maria Dreyer Breitenbach, responsável pela Coordenação de Pesquisa (CPQ) do INCA, decisiva em muitos momentos.
À Profª Drª Eliana Cláudia de Otero Ribeiro, atual responsável pela CEDC do INCA, pelas aulas e posicionamento de apoio na responsabilidade institucional com seus profissionais.
À Srª Margarete Amado de Souza Donadon, secretária da Subcomissão de Pós-Graduação do Departamento de Tocoginecologia, da UNICAMP, pelo apoio e colaboração em tantos momentos.
A toda a equipe da Astec, pela colaboração na formatação do trabalho e pela correção deste material.
Aos pacientes, que mesmo atravessando um momento crucial de suas vidas, gentilmente concordaram em participar deste estudo.
A todos os amigos e funcionários do INCA, pelo incentivo na realização desta etapa de pós-graduação, cujos nomes deixo de citar, mas que se sentirão incluídos, meus sinceros agradecimentos.
xi
Sumário
Símbolos, Siglas e Abreviaturas...................................................................................................xiii Resumo......................................................................................................................................... xv Summary......................................................................................................................................xvii 1. Introdução................................................................................................................................19 2. Objetivos..................................................................................................................................27
2.1. Objetivo Geral ..................................................................................................................27 2.2. Objetivos Específicos.......................................................................................................27
3. Publicações .............................................................................................................................29 3.1. Artigo 1.............................................................................................................................30 3.2. Artigo2..............................................................................................................................53 3.3. Artigo 3.............................................................................................................................77
4. Discussão ..............................................................................................................................107 5. Conclusões ............................................................................................................................111 6. Referências Bibliográficas .....................................................................................................113 7. Anexos...................................................................................................................................119
7.1. Anexo 1 – Metodo..........................................................................................................119 7.2. Anexo 2 – Carta de Autorização do FACT ....................................................................122 7.3. Anexo 3 – Parecer do Comitê de Ética em Pesquisa do INCA.....................................123 7.4. Anexo 4 –Termo de Consentimento Livre e Esclarecido (Validação do questionário
FACT-F) .........................................................................................................................124 7.5. Anexo 5 –Termo de Consentimento Livre e Esclarecido (Avaliação da fadiga e
qualidade de vida em mulheres com câncer de mama)................................................127 7.6. Anexo 6 – Características Sociodemográficas (Validação do FACT-F)........................130 7.7. Anexo 7 – Características Sociodemográficas (Avaliação de fadiga e qualidade de vida
em mulheres com câncer de mama) .............................................................................131 7.8. Anexo 8 – FACT- F Versão 4.........................................................................................133 7.9. Anexo 9 – FACIT-F Scoring Guidelines (Version 4) Pages 1........................................136 7.10. Anexo 10 – Questionário de Qualidade de Vida SF-36 ..............................................138
Símbolos, Siglas e Abreviaturas xiii
Símbolos, Siglas e Abreviaturas
AC – Doxorubicin / cyclophosphamide
CAF – Cyclophosphamide ,/ doxorubicin / 5-fluorouracil
CEF – Cyclophosphamide / epirubicin / fluorouracil
CMF – Cyclophosphamide / methotrexate / 5-fluorouracil
ECOG – Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group
EORTC QLQ C30 – European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire
EWB – Emotional Well-Being
FACIT – Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy
FACT – Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy
FACT-Br – Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy - Brain cancer
FACT-C – Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy - Colorectal cancer
FACT-F – Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy- Fatigue
FACT-G – Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy- General
FACT-L – Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy- Lung cancer
FACT-P – Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy - Prostate cancer
Símbolos, Siglas e Abreviaturas xiv
FAHI – Functional Assessment of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection
FAMS – Functional Assessment of Multiple Sclerosis
FQ – Fatigue Questionnaire
FS – Fatigue Subscale
FWB – Functional Well-being
HRQOL – Health Related Quality of Life
ICC – Intraclass Correlation Coefficient
INCA – Instituto Nacional de Câncer
NCI – National Cancer Institute
P – Probabilidade da amostra
PS – Performance Status
PWB – Physical Well-being
QOL – Quality of Life
QV – Qualidade de vida
SD – Standard Deviation
SF-36 – Short-Form Health Survey
SWB – Social/Family Well-being
UNICAMP – Universidade Estadual de Campinas
Resumo xv
Resumo
Objetivos: Validar a versão em português do questionário Functional Assessment of
Cancer Therapy-Fatigue (FACT-F) em pacientes com câncer e avaliar a fadiga e a
qualidade de vida em mulheres com câncer de mama em quimioterapia. Sujeitos e
métodos: Para este estudo de validação do questionário FACT-F foram incluídos
270 pacientes, sendo 85 para avaliar a reprodutibilidade do questionário com
diferentes tipos de câncer. Para avaliar a fadiga e qualidade de vida em mulheres
com câncer de mama em quimioterapia foi realizado um estudo longitudinal e
incluídas 188 mulheres. O período de realização dos estudos foi de setembro de
2005 a março de 2007. Inicialmente foi avaliada a reprodutibilidade do FACT-F
através do teste-reteste para a língua portuguesa em pacientes com câncer; em
seguida a versão para língua portuguesa foi submetida à validação, a fim de
estabelecer propriedades incluindo a validade e confiabilidade em uma amostra de
pacientes brasileiros com câncer; finalmente foi avaliada a relação entre fadiga e
qualidade de vida relacionada à saúde em pacientes com câncer de mama antes do
início da quimioterapia, e após 3º e 6º ciclo de quimioterapia. Resultados: O
FACT-F apresentou uma boa correlação intraclasse para os domínios que foram
de 0,72 para bem-estar físico; 0,91 para bem-estar social e familiar; 0,90 para
Resumo xvi
bem-estar emocional; 0,86 para bem-estar funcional; 0,88 para subescala
fadiga e 0,91 para FACT-F. O coeficiente a de Cronbach foi de 0,78 para bem-
estar físico; 0,68 para bem-estar social e familiar; 0,75 para bem-estar emocional;
0,74 para bem-estar funcional; 0,91 para subescala fadigas e 0,92 para o FACT-
F. A correlação de Pearson foi excelente entre domínio vitalidade do SF-36 e FACT-
F total (r=0,76), e subscala fadiga (r=0,77); sendo boa entre o FACT-F e na
maioria dos domínios do SF-36, variando de r =0,51 a 0,76, exceto para domínio
físico (r =0,31). Houve uma diminuição significante dos escores do FACT-F
(p<0,001), FACT-G (p=0,029), subescala fadiga (p<0,001) e bem-estar físico
(p<0,001) entre antes da quimioterapia e após o terceiro ciclo de quimioterapia e
permanecendo um platô até após o sexto ciclo (p<0,001) refletindo uma manutenção
da fadiga e baixa qualidade de vida em mulheres com câncer de mama. O escore
do bem-estar emocional teve um pequeno aumento após o terceiro ciclo (p<0,001),
permanecendo após o sexto ciclo (p<0,001) enquanto os escores do bem-estar
funcional e do bem-estar social e familiar não mostraram diferença entre antes e
durante a quimioterapia. A fadiga está relacionada à baixa qualidade de vida
relacionada à saúde. Conclusões: O instrumento FACT-F apresentou uma boa
reprodutibilidade teste-reteste em uma série heterogênea de pacientes, com
diferentes tipos de câncer, performance status e estadiamento. A versão portuguesa
do FACT-F é um instrumento válido e confiável para avaliar a fadiga e qualidade de
vida em pacientes com câncer. A fadiga aumentou e piorou a qualidade de vida em
pacientes com câncer de mama submetidas à quimioterapia.
Summary xvii
Summary
Objectives: Validate the Portuguese version of the FACT-F questionnaire in cancer
patients and fatigue and quality of life in breast cancer patients in chemotherapy.
Subjects and methods: This study of FACT-F validation included 270 patients,
85 were to evaluate the questionnaire reproducibility in patients with different
types of cancer. The study to evaluate fatigue and quality of life in breast cancer
during chemotherapy was prospective and 188 women were included. The study
was conducted from September 2005 to March 2007. It was initially assessed the
reproducibility of the FACT-F through the test-retest for the Portuguese language in
patients with cancer, following the Portuguese language version was submitted
to validation in order to establish properties including the validity and reliability in
a sample of Brazilian cancer patients, finally, it was assessed the relation
between fatigue and quality of life related to health in patients with breast cancer
before the start of chemotherapy, and after 3 and 6 cycle of chemotherapy.
Results: FACT-F had a Intraclass Correlation Coefficient to the domains that
were 0.72 for physical well-being, 0.91 for social/family well-being; 0.90 for emotional
well-being, 0.86 for functional well-being, 0.88 fatigue subscale and 0.91 for total
FACT-F. Cronbach a coefficient was 0.78 for physical well-being, 0.68 for
Summary xviii
social/family well-being, 0.75 for emotional well-being, 0.74 for functional well-
being, 0.91 for fatigue, and 0.92 for total FACT-F. The Pearson correlation was
excellent between SF-36 vitality scale and total FACT-F (r=0.76) and fatigue
subscale (r=0.77); and good correlation in most dimensions ranging from r=0.51
to r=0.76, except to SF-36 physical (r=0.31). There were a significant decrease
in mean FACT-F (p<0.001), FACT-G (p=0.029), Fatigue subscale (p<0.001),
Physical well being (p<0,001) scores between the start of the treatment and
after cycle 3 and than appeared to plateau at cycle 6 (p<0.001) reflecting
maintenance in fatigue symptoms and lower quality of life in breast cancer
patients. The Emotional well being scores increased a little between the start of
chemotherapy and after cycle 3 (p<0.001) and remained a plateau at cycle 6
(p<0.001) while social/family well-being scores showed no differences before
and during chemotherapy. Fatigue is related to lower health related quality of
life. Conclusion: FACT-F questionnaire in Portuguese has good test-retest
reproducibility in patients with different types of cancer, performance status and
stages. The Portuguese version of FACT-F is a reliable and valid instrument to
assess QOL and fatigue to screen cancer-related fatigue in Brazilian cancer
patients. Fatigue increased and worsened in health related HRQOL in breast
cancer submitted to chemotherapy.
Introdução 19
1. Introdução
O câncer de mama é um importante problema de saúde pública devido à
sua alta incidência e mortalidade. No Brasil, as estimativas realizadas pelo
Instituto Nacional de Câncer (INCA) para o ano de 2008, válidas também para o
ano de 2009, apontam que ocorrerão 466.730 casos novos de câncer. Os tipos
mais incidentes, à exceção do câncer de pele do tipo não melanoma, serão os
cânceres de próstata e de pulmão, entre os homens, e os cânceres de mama e
de colo do útero entre as mulheres, acompanhando o mesmo perfil da magnitude
observada no mundo.
O número de casos novos de câncer de mama esperados para o Brasil,
no ano de 2008, é de 49.400, com um risco estimado de 51 casos a cada 100
mil mulheres (INCA, 2007).
Na região Sudeste, o câncer de mama é o mais incidente entre as mulheres,
com um risco estimado de 68 casos novos por 100 mil. Sem considerar os tumores
de pele não melanoma, esse tipo de câncer também é o mais frequente nas
mulheres das regiões Sul (67/100.000), Centro-Oeste (38/100.000) e Nordeste
(28/100.000). Na região Norte é o segundo tumor mais incidente (16/100.000).
Introdução 20
Apesar de ser considerado um câncer de relativamente bom prognóstico, as
taxas de mortalidade por câncer de mama continuam elevadas no Brasil, muito
provavelmente porque a doença ainda é diagnosticada em estádios avançados
(INCA, 2007).
Os avanços tecnológicos no diagnóstico e o tratamento precoce do
câncer têm aumentado a sobrevida dos pacientes. Um dos maiores problemas
relatados pelos pacientes com câncer é a fadiga. A fadiga é altamente prevalente,
ocorrendo em até 94% dos pacientes com câncer. Sua frequência aumenta
significativamente durante a quimioterapia e a radioterapia (Ishikawa et al., 2005).
Para a maioria dos indivíduos a fadiga é uma resposta protetora para o
estresse físico e psicológico e o descanso restaura completamente o bem-estar
no indivíduo saudável (Ahlberg et al., 2003). Os pacientes com fadiga se
expressam utilizando os termos cansado, débil, extenuado, esgotado, farto, pesado
ou lento. Os profissionais da saúde empregam termos como astenia, lassitude,
prostração, intolerância ao exercício, falta de energia e fraqueza (NCI, 2008).
A fadiga é a maior causa da diminuição da qualidade de vida em pacientes
com câncer (Curt, 2000). A fadiga relacionada ao câncer tem um impacto sobre
a vida dos pacientes com devastadoras conseqüências econômicas e sociais, e
podem persistir por meses ou mesmo anos após a conclusão do tratamento
(Prue et al., 2006). Devido ao impacto da fadiga sobre a qualidade de vida do
paciente, os estudos sobre os efeitos relacionados com o tratamento são de
relevância para o tratamento do câncer (Visser e Smets, 1998).
Introdução 21
A causa da fadiga é desconhecida. A explicação do mecanismo que
promove a fadiga relacionada ao câncer ainda permanece obscura, mas como
sintoma, é quase certo que a sua origem seja multifatorial (Stone e Minton, 2008).
Acredita-se que haja fatores que contribuam para a fadiga como o próprio
tratamento de câncer, anemia, fatores de nutrição, fatores psicológicos, fatores
cognitivos, transtorno de sono e inatividade e medicamentos (NCI, 2008). A
depressão, a incapacidade física, a necessidade de dormir e descansar durante
o dia e a tendência de atribuir as queixas de fadiga ao tratamento de câncer de
mama contribuem significativamente para a severidade da fadiga (Servaes et
al., 2002). Embora muitos pacientes com câncer relatem que a fadiga é um
obstáculo para manter as atividades normais diárias e com qualidade de vida,
raramente é avaliado e tratado na prática clínica (Portenoy e Itri, 1999).
Dillon e Kelly (2003) realizaram um estudo na Irlanda sobre fadiga envolvendo
109 médicos e 160 enfermeiros que atendem pacientes oncológicos e 143
pacientes oncológicos. A maioria dos médicos e enfermeiros relatou que a náusea
era o efeito colateral que mais incomodava os pacientes. A alopecia foi o segundo
efeito colateral na percepção dos médicos e a fadiga foi o segundo na percepção
dos enfermeiros. Em contrapartida, quase metade dos pacientes (41%) relataram
que a fadiga era o efeito colateral que mais os afetava durante o tratamento,
seguida por náusea com 12% e 8% a queda de cabelo. Esses achados sugeriram
que os médicos e enfermeiros estavam subestimando o impacto da fadiga nos
pacientes. Ambos os profissionais concordaram que os pacientes vivenciavam
a fadiga e que os pacientes mencionaram a fadiga na maioria das visitas.
Introdução 22
Em outro estudo realizado por Stone et al. (2003) sobre a fadiga relacionada
ao câncer, entre profissionais de saúde, pacientes e cuidadores, os autores
relataram que quando os pacientes dialogavam com o médico sobre a fadiga,
os médicos referiam que a fadiga era causada pelo câncer (31%) e pelo
tratamento de câncer (77%). Cinqüenta e dois por cento dos pacientes com fadiga
nunca falaram sobre este sintoma com o médico, porque achavam que este
sintoma era “inevitável”, que não achavam “suficientemente importantes” e
acreditavam que “nada podia ser feito” ou que os médicos também “nunca tocaram
neste assunto”. Dezesseis por cento dos pacientes que conversaram com os
médicos sobre esse assunto relataram que ”tinha que viver com isso“ ou que
“pouco poderia ser feito” para tratar a fadiga. Neste estudo, muitos profissionais
de saúde (79%) acreditam que a fadiga pode ser causada pela combinação da
doença e do tratamento, e 85% deles falaram aos pacientes que era um efeito
colateral do câncer e/ou tratamento. Oitenta e sete por cento achavam que a
fadiga foi subtratada. Os profissionais de saúde prescreveram ou recomendaram
um tratamento para aproximadamente 50% dos pacientes com fadiga. As
recomendações mais frequentes desses profissionais foram para descansar e
relaxar, melhorar a dieta, transfusão sanguínea, fisioterapia e exercícios e
prescrição de medicamentos. Muitos dos cuidadores dos pacientes envolvidos
eram um familiar ou um amigo, e eles identificavam a fadiga como um problema
importante para os pacientes, porém somente 26% dos cuidadores conversaram
sobre a fadiga com o médico. E as razões mais frequentes foram porque eles
acharam que era “inevitável” ou que “nada poderia ser feito”.
Introdução 23
A avaliação da fadiga tem sido amplamente utilizada para avaliar os
efeitos dos tratamentos. É também útil nos estudos de novas abordagens e novas
maneiras de controlar os sintomas, para melhorar o conhecimento dos médicos
e identificar as necessidades dos pacientes, visando ao desenvolvimento de
estratégias adequadas para o cuidado (Flechtner e Bottomley, 2003).
Em uma recente revisão sistemática da literatura científica foram
encontradas 14 escalas para avaliar a fadiga, e os questionários mais comumente
utilizados foram o Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Fatigue (FACT-F),
o European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life
Questionnaire subscala fadiga (EORTC QLQ C30) e o Fatigue Questionnaire
(FQ) (Minton e Stone, 2008).
O Sistema de Medição Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy
(FACIT), em desenvolvimento desde 1987, produziu a sua quarta versão, edição de
novembro de 1997 (Webster et al., 1999). O sistema FACIT (Lent et al., 1999) inclui
o Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy (FACT), o Functional Assessment
of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection (FAHI), e o Functional Assessment of
Multiple Sclerosis (FAMS). O FACT-G (Cella et al., 1993) em combinação com a
subescala "preocupações adicionais" fornece uma avaliação da qualidade de
vida específica para vários tipos de cânceres, como próstata (FACT-P) (Esper et al.,
1997), colorretal (FACT-C) (Ward et al., 1999), cerebral (FACT-Br) (Weitzner et al.,
1995), pulmão (FACT-L) (Cella et al., 1995), e etc. Estes questionários foram
desenvolvidos nos Estados Unidos e estão disponíveis em 45 idiomas, permitindo a
comparação de diferentes populações, utilizando-se de um método rigoroso de
Introdução 24
tradução e retro-tradução, testes psicométricos e entrevista cognitiva (Webster
et al., 2003). Os questionários do sistema FACIT só podem ser utilizados com
permissão e devem ser solicitados pelo site www.facit.org. Todos os questionários
que compõem o FACIT foram submetidos a um desenvolvimento padronizado
por um método válido que passou por cinco fases: (1) geração do item, (2)
revisão e redução do item, (3) construção da escala, (4) avaliação inicial e (5)
avaliação adicional para toda a medida do sistema (Cella e Mowinski, 2002).
O FACT-G foi desenvolvido e validado nos Estados Unidos para medir a
qualidade de vida em pacientes adultos com câncer e está agora na versão 4
(Cella et al.,1993). Seus 27 itens contemplam quatro domínios: bem-estar físico,
bem-estar social/familiar, bem-estar emocional e bem-estar funcional. Foi considerado
apropriado para o uso em pacientes com qualquer tipo de câncer (Webster et
al., 1999). O FACT-G foi concebido originalmente em inglês e submetido a
processo de tradução para o português, o que incluiu duas traduções, uma
tradução de reconciliação, uma retro-tradução da versão reconciliada e quatro
revisões independentes por expert bilíngüe, tendo sido pré-testado em 19
pacientes com câncer em Portugal e em 30 pacientes no Brasil (Arnold et al.,
2000; Arnold et al., 2001).
O FACT-F foi especialmente desenvolvido para medir a fadiga em pacientes
com câncer. Consiste em um questionário que inclui o total de 40 itens, sendo 27 do
Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General (FACT-G), para avaliação da
qualidade de vida global, e 13 itens específicos sobre Fadiga (Yellen et al., 1997). A
Subescala fadiga foi desenvolvida entre maio e outubro de 1994 e validada em
Introdução 25
1997 em pacientes americanos. Avaliação da fadiga e qualidade de vida (QV) são
importantes na avaliação comparativa de tratamentos, na tomada de decisões
sobre futuros tratamentos, e em cuidados paliativos (Yellen et al.,1997). Este
instrumento permite uma compreensão sobre o estado atual do paciente e a
medição das mudanças ao longo do tempo, tornando-se uma ferramenta útil
(Cella, 1997).
O questionário FACT-F tem sido utilizado para avaliar sintomas decorrentes
de tratamentos de câncer, como a quimioterapia (Wadler et al., 2002; Downie et al.,
2006) e a radioterapia (Wratten et al., 2004), a eficácia, dosagem e segurança de
medicamentos para tratamento de anemia induzida pela quimioterapia (Vadhan-
Raj, 2003; Gregory, 2006), nas intervenções com exercícios em pacientes com
câncer e fadiga (Courneya et al., 2003; Segal et al., 2003; Dimeo et al., 2008),
na terapia complementar em câncer (Tsang et al., 2007) e na intervenção de
enfermagem (Godino et al, 2006).
A falta de um instrumento na língua desejada leva ao desenvolvimento
de instrumentos no próprio idioma, ou utilização daqueles já existentes, após
traduzi-los e validá-los (Prieto, 1992). Os instrumentos que foram desenvolvidos
e validados em outros países devem ser validados e adaptados culturalmente
no Brasil, devido a diferenças culturais existentes nessas populações.
O presente estudo refere sobre a validação do FACT-F na língua
portuguesa e a escolha desse instrumento foi devido à sua comprovada
aplicabilidade em vários estudos. No momento do início desta pesquisa não
Introdução 26
havia instrumentos validados em português para mensurar fadiga no Brasil. Os
questionários de fadiga atualmente validados no Brasil são o Chalter Fatigue
Questionnaire, que foi validado em 2007 (Cho et al., 2007) e o Piper Fatigue
Scale, validado recentemente em 2008 (Mota et al., 2008), e o crescente
número de instrumentos validados reflete a importância desse assunto.
Após a validação do FACT-F, este instrumento foi utilizado para avaliar a
fadiga e qualidade de vida em mulheres com câncer de mama antes da
quimioterapia e depois do terceiro e sexto ciclos de quimioterapia.
O detalhamento do método referente a este estudo de validação e
aplicação do FACT-F em mulheres com câncer de mama durante a quimioterapia
está descrito no anexo 7.1, incluindo detalhes do cálculo do tamanho da
amostra e os testes estatísticos utilizados.
Objetivos 27
2. Objetivos
2.1. Objetivo Geral
Validar a versão em português do questionário FACT-F em pacientes
com câncer e avaliar a fadiga e a qualidade de vida em mulheres com câncer
de mama em tratamento de quimioterapia.
2.2. Objetivos Específicos
– Artigo 1- Reproducibility of Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-
Fatigue (FACT-F) Questionnaire for Cancer Patients
Avaliar a reprodutibilidade do questionário Functional Assessment of
Cancer Therapy-Fatigue (FACT-F) através do teste-reteste para a
língua portuguesa em um período de 3 a 14 dias, em pacientes com
câncer que se encontravam em tratamento de quimioterapia.
Objetivos 28
– Artigo 2- Validation of the Portuguese Version of Functional
Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Fatigue (FACT-F) in Brazilian
Cancer Patients
Validar para o português o questionário FACT-F, a fim de estabelecer
propriedades incluindo a validade e confiabilidade em uma amostra de
pacientes brasileiros com câncer.
– Artigo 3- Fatigue And Health-Related Quality of Life during 6
Cycles of Chemotherapy in Breast Cancer Patients
Avaliar pacientes com câncer de mama antes do início da quimioterapia,
e após 3º e 6º ciclos de quimioterapia, a fim de identificar mudanças na
fadiga que poderão ocorrer após o início da quimioterapia; e determinar
a relação entre a fadiga e a qualidade de vida relacionada à saúde
controlada pela atividade física e tabagismo.
Publicações 29
3. Publicações
Artigo 1 - Reproducibility of Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-
Fatigue (FACT-F) Questionnaire for Cancer Patients
Artigo 2 - Validation of the Portuguese Version of Functional Assessment
of Cancer Therapy-Fatigue (FACT-F) in Brazilian Cancer Patients
Artigo 3 - Fatigue and Health-Related Quality of Life During 6 Cycles of
Chemotherapy in Breast Cancer Patients
Publicações 30
3.1. Artigo 1
Reproducibility of Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Fatigue
(FACT-F) Questionnaire for Cancer Patients
Neli Muraki Ishikawa1, Luiz Claudio Santos Thuler2, Alessandra Grasso Giglio1,
Clarissa Seródio da Rocha Baldotto1, Carlos José Coelho de Andrade1, Sophie
Françoise Mauricette Derchain3
1 Brazilian National Cancer Institute (INCA), Rio de Janeiro. 2 Rio de Janeiro State Federal University (UNIRIO) and Brazilian National
Cancer Institute (INCA), Rio de Janeiro. 3 State University of Campinas (UNICAMP), Campinas.
This study was done at National Institute of Cancer (Instituto Nacional de
Câncer - INCA), Rio de Janeiro, RJ
Praça Cruz Vermelha, 23 - Centro
20230-130 - Rio de Janeiro - RJ
*Corresponding Author:
Neli Muraki Ishikawa
Serviço de Integração Humana, Instituto Nacional de Câncer (INCA) - Rua do
Rezende, 128. CEP: 20231-092. Rio de Janeiro, RJ.
Tel: (21) 3970-7884 / 3970-7945
Email: nelimuraki@gmail.com
Publicações 31
Artigo enviado em 24 de julho de 2008 para a revista Applied Cancer
Research, conforme e-mail abaixo.
de Sonia Calazans Pereira <sonia.pereira@appliedcr.org>
para Neli Muraki Ishikawa <nelimuraki@gmail.com>
data 24 de julho de 2008 19:16 assunto [ACR] Agradecimento pela Submissão enviado por hm415.locaweb.com.br
Neli Muraki Ishikawa, Agradecemos a submissão do seu manuscrito "Reprodutibilidade do questionário de avaliação da fadiga FACT-F em pacientes com câncer" para Applied Cancer Research. Através da interface de administração do sistema, utilizado para a submissão, será possível acompanhar o progresso do documento dentro do processo editorial, bastanto logar no sistema localizado em: URL do Manuscrito: http://www.appliedcr.org.br/index.php/appliedcr/author/submission/135 Login: nelimuraki Em caso de dúvidas, envie suas questões para este email. Agradecemos mais uma vez considerar nossa revista como meio de transmitir ao público seu trabalho. Sonia Calazans Pereira Applied Cancer Research http://www.appliedcr.org
Artigo aceito em 28 de julho de 2008, conforme e-mail abaixo.
de Erika Maria Monteiro Santos <erikammsantos@appliedcr.org> para Neli Muraki Ishikawa <nelimuraki@gmail.com> data 28 de julho de 2008 12:28
assunto Reproducibility of the questionnaire for assessing fatigue FACT-F in patients with cancer
enviado por hm415.locaweb.com.br
Publicações 32
Prezada Neli Agradecemos a submissão do artigo Reproducibility of the questionnaire for assessing fatigue FACT-F in patients with cancer. O artigo foi revisto e aceito para publicação após as modificações sugeridas pelo revisor. Solicito a realização destas sugestões no menor prazo possível e envio através do sistema de submissão. Os comentários do revisor estão abaixo. Atenciosamente Benedito Mauro Rossi Editor-Chefe Applied Cancer Research -----------------------------------------------------
Reviewer 1 - Relevância do artigo [moderada] 2 - Qualidade do título [boa] 3 – O resumo contempla os passos do planejamento do trabalho: objetivos, métodos, resultados e conclusão? [totalmente] 4 - Palavras-chave adequadas [sim] INTRODUÇÃO 5 – A introdução tem qualidade e é pertinente [não] 6 - Corresponde ao tema proposto? [sim] 7 – Tamanho [nsuficiente] OBJETIVO 8 - Apresentação adequada? [sim] MÉTODOS 9 - O desenho do estudo (observacional transversal, coorte, caso-controle, experimental, metanálise) é apropriado? [sim] 10 A descrição dos critérios de exclusão e inclusão dos pacientes é adequada? [não] RESULTADOS 11- Resultados apresentados correspondem às questões da pesquisa? [sim] 12 - Qualidade na apresentação dos resultados: [boa] 13 - Compreensão das tabelas, gráficos e figuras: [/boa/] DISCUSSÃO 14 - A discussão é coerente com o desenvolvimento e com os resultados do trabalho? [parcialmente]
Publicações 33
REFERÊNCIAS BIBLIOGRÁFICAS 15 – As referências são pertinentes [parcialmente] 16 - As referências são atualizadas [parcialmente] O artigo aborda um tema relevante que é a reprodutibilidade dos questionários para avaliação da qualidade de vida. A introdução é curta, e não aborda com clareza a importância de avaliar a fadiga. Também não contempla resultados obtidos com o FACT-F. No método, a principal questão é que embora o artigo tenha se proposto a avaliar a reprodutibilidade, não há citação a avaliação da estrutura do artigo através da validade de constrututo. Outro aspecto relevante é a forma de seleção dos pacientes que não ficou clara. Acredito que o serviço onde a pesquisa fora realizada tenha um grande fluxo de pacientes, no entanto a amostra se consituiu de 85 indivíduos. Os critérios de inclusão e a forma da seleção não ficou clara. Foram pacientes consecutivos que se apresentaram em um único dia de atendimento? Ou os pacientes foram sorteados? Qual o critério para a inclusão? Há cálculo no tamanho da amostra? Também foi observado que parte da amostra respondeu o questionário e outra parte foi entrevistada. Foram observadas diferenças na reprodutibilidade entre os grupos de acordo com o método de administração? Há diferenças na reprodutibilidade de acordo com a escolaridade? ------------------------------------------------------ Applied Cancer Research http://www.appliedcr.org Prova do artigo 2 de dezembro de 2008, conforme e-mail abaixo. de Erika Maria Monteiro Santos <erikammsantos@appliedcr.org> para Neli Muraki Ishikawa <nelimuraki@gmail.com> data 2 de dezembro de 2008 11:20 assunto Re: [ACR] Proofreading Request (Author) enviado por appliedcr.org Prezada Neli Em anexo a segunda prova do artigo. Atenciosamente Erika Maria Monteiro Santos Managing Editor Applied Cancer Research
acr_135_reprodutibility prova 2.pdf 550K
Publicações 34
Abstract
Objective: The objective of this study was evaluating the reproducibility in
Portuguese of Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Fatigue (FACT-F)
questionnaire for cancer patients by applying it according to the test-retest
method. Material and Methods: Subjects were 85 cancer patients with an
average age of 51.0 years, being 56 (65.9%) women and 29 (34.1%) men.
FACT-F questionnaire consists of 40 items, divided in five domains, and is
applied for evaluating quality of life and fatigue in patients with cancer. We used
as a measuring tool intraclass correlation coefficient values obtained from two
measures of test-retest and scatter plot proposed by Bland-Altman. Results: In
36.5% of cases the questionnaire was self-administered, and in 63.5% of the
cases read by an interviewer and filled after verbal answer. Intraclass correlation
coefficient values found for the domains were: physical well-being 0.72;
social/family well-being 0.91; emotional well-being 0.90; functional well-being
0.86; fatigue subscale 0.88, and for the FACT-F 0.91. The Bland-Altman plot
showed to be adequate, since most points were within the limits of reliability.
Conclusions: FACT-F questionnaire in Portuguese has good test-retest
reproducibility in patients with different types of cancer, performance status and
stages.
Keywords: Quality of life; fatigue; questionnaire; reproducibility
Publicações 35
Introduction
Fatigue is highly prevalent, affecting about 94% of patients with cancer.
Its frequency increases significantly during chemotherapy and radiotherapy1 and
has a great impact on the quality of life of oncologic patients 1, 2.
Measuring fatigue has been widely used to evaluate the effects of treatments.
It is also useful for studying new approaches and new ways of controlling
symptoms, to improve the knowledge of doctors and to identify the necessities
of the patients, aiming at the development of more adequate care strategies3.
Cancer-related fatigue may be evaluated by specific one-dimensional or
multidimensional instruments1. In a recent systematic review of the scientific
literature, 14 fatigue-evaluating scales were found; the most common questionnaires
were Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Fatigue (FACT-F), European
Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire
(EORTC QLQ C30) (fatigue subscale) and it Fatigue Questionnaire (FQ) 4.
FACT-F questionnaire has been used to evaluate symptoms resulting from
cancer treatments such as chemotherapy5, 6 and radiotherapy7, as well as the
efficiency, dosage and security of medicines for chemotherapy-induced anemia
8, 9, in interventions involving exercises in patients with cancer and fatigue10, 11,
12, in complementary cancer therapy 13, and in nursing interventions14.
FACT-F consists of a questionnaire with a total of 40 items, being 27 items the
Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General (FACT-G), for evaluating global
quality of life, and 13 specific items related to Fatigue15. FACT-F is part of the
measure system Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy (FACIT), which
comprises a collection of health-related quality of life questionnaires. These
Publicações 36
questionnaires were developed to be applied to patients with chronic diseases16.
All FACIT questionnaires were submitted to a standardized development with
valid methodology that passes through five phases: (1) generation of the item,
(2) revision and reduction of the item, (3) construction of the scale, (4) initial
evaluation and (5) additional evaluation for the whole system measure17. They
are available in 45 languages, allowing the comparison of different populations,
using a rigorous methodology of translation and back-translation, psychometric
tests and cognitive interviews16.
FACT-G specifically was developed and validated to measure the quality
of life in adult patients with cancer and is now in its 4 version18. Its 27 items
contemplate four domains: physical well-being, social/family well-being, emotional
well-being and functional well-being. It is considered appropriate for patients with any
type of cancer19. FACT-G was conceived originally in English and submitted to a
translation process into Portuguese, which included two translations, a reconciliation
translation, a back-translation of the reconciled version and four independent
revisions by bilingual expert. It was pre-tested in 19 cancer patients in Portugal
and 30 in Brazil 20,21. However, the version in the Portuguese language was not
validated for the Brazilian population. Thus, the use of FACT-F in Brazil requires
to be validated and culturally adapted. The present study aims to evaluate the
stability of version 4 of FACT-F questionnaire for the Portuguese language in its
use with patients with cancer through the test –retest method22.
Publicações 37
Materials and Methods
Subjects selection
From September 2005 and February 2006, women and men with cancer
treated with chemotherapy or hormone therapy in the outpatient department of
Clinical Oncology of the Brazilian National Cancer Institute (INCA) were selected
for the study. Patients were included with ages from 18 and 82 years and who
were able to return to the Institution for consultations or treatment with other
professionals, or to submit to examinations in a period from 3 to 14 days, which
allowed the application of the retest. 85 patients were included in this study, a
number higher than the minimum recommended sample size for test-retest
reproducibility, which is at least 50 subjects23, 24.
Subjects were excluded who had more than one cancer diagnosis, were
pregnant at diagnosis, and with a diagnosed psychiatric disease. In the end, 85
patients were included. The present study was approved by the Committee of
Ethics of Research of the Brazilian National Cancer Institute. All patients signed
the Term of Free and Informed Consent before being included in the research.
Instruments
Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy - Fatigue (FACT-F)
We used version 4 of FACT-F, with 40 items, including 27 of FACT-G, which
evaluates specifically quality of life, and an additional domain with 13 specific
items about Fatigue15. The use of the questionnaire was authorized and made
available by the authors in Portuguese language for this research. The instrument
explores, as said, five domains: physical well-being, social/family well-being,
Publicações 38
emotional well-being and functional well-being and fatigue. The physical well-
being domain has 7 items with scores from 0 to 28 points; social/family well-being, 7
items with score from 0 to 28 points; emotional well-being, 6 items with score
from 0 to 24 points; functional well-being, 7 items with score from 0 to 28 points;
and fatigue subscale, 13 items with score from 0 to 52. Each item has five likert-
type options graduated from 0 to 4: “Not at all”, “A little bit”; “Somewhat”; “Quite
a bit”; “Very much”. The final score of FACT-F is obtained by adding the scores
of the five domains, and may vary from 0 to 160 points. The higher the number
of points, the better the quality of life and the less the fatigue of the patients is. To
obtain the score, the negative questions are reverted; then the answers of the
domains are added up, and a proportional average is carried out in case of non
answered items. It is acceptable a 50% score of non-answered questions. But 80%
of answered questions are considered adequate16. The instrument make questions
about health condition in the last seven days, and was written for a reading level
of a fourth grader of elementary level (9 - 10 years of age), and it can be self
administered, applied in the form of an interview, read by the researcher to the
participants, and applied by telefone16, 18.
Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status (PS) 25
For clinical evaluation of patients, we used the PS, a method of clinical
evaluation of patients, recognized by the World Health Organization and widely
used in patients with cancer. The scores vary from 0 to 4: PS 0 - normal activity;
PS1 - symptoms of the disease, but ambulatory and with a normal daily routine;
PS2 - out of bed more than 50 % of the time; PS3 - more than 50% of the time
in bed, needing more intensive care; PS4 – restricted to bed.
Publicações 39
Additional information
We also evaluated patient gender, marital status, and educational level,
as well as the topography of the primary cancer, its stage and treatment.
Demographic information on disease and treatment were obtained and collected
from the medical register of patients.
Statistical analysis
Information obtained from the filled questionnaires was stored in an electronic
environment, using Microsoft Excel and subsequently exported to the program
Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS), version 13.0, for data
consistency analysis and statistical treatment. Descriptive statistic (percentages or
averages accompanied by the respective standard deviations) was calculated to
describe the characteristics of the subjects and the scores of each domain of the
FACT-F. The qui-square test was used for the analysis of the categorical variables.
The reproducibility of the questionnaire was tested through two evaluations: one in
the moment of the inclusion in the study and on second repeated after a period
from 3 to 14 days (average 6.5 days ± 2.84), with the purpose to compare the
results obtained by the same examiner in different times.
The reproducibility of information of the questionnaires was analyzed in
the present study using two statistical procedures: intraclass correlation
coefficient (ICC) for values obtained in two measurements (test-retest) and the
scatter plot proposed by Bland-Altman, which compares graphically differences
between values obtained in the test and the retest of FACT-F (FACTFtest –
FACTFretest) with the averages of two evaluations [(FACTFtest + FACTFretest)/2].
Publicações 40
We considered as limit of agreement in Bland-Altman scatter plot twice the
standard deviation of the average of the differences between the obtained
results26, 27. Besides, we calculated Pearson correlation coefficient, aiming to
compare results obtained with those of the original article of validation of FACT-
F for the English language. Pearson correlation coefficient was classified in the
following way: 0-0.25 - not correlated; 0.25-0.50 - weak correlation; 0.50-0.75 -
moderated to good correlation; >0.75 very good to excellent correlation28. ICC
can vary from 0 to +1, in this case indicating a high reproducibility, while ICC=0
indicates no reproducibility29. We used the significance level of a=0.05. We also
calculated the confidence interval of 95 % (CI95%) for each ICC value.
Results
Sociodemographic and disease characteristics
Subjects of the study were 85 patients with an average age of 51.0 years
(±12.2), varying from 19 to 82 years of age; 65.9% (n=56) were female and 34.1%
(n=29) male; the marital status of this population was: 23.5% unmarried, 42.4%
married, 17.6 % separated/ divorced and 16.5% widowers. Educational level was:
48.2% - elementary school; 35.3% -secondary school; 16.5% - college. As for the
type of cancer, the most frequent were breast cancer (31.8%), colorectal cancer
(21.4%), lymphoma (16.5%), lung (8.2 %), and other types (22.1%): stomach,
myeloma, Ewing/PNET, soft tissue sarcoma, osteosarcoma, melanoma, bladder
and tymoma. Most cases were stage IV (38.8%) followed by stage III (35.3%),
stage II (24.7%) and stage I (1.2%), all being treated with chemotherapy; from
these, 57.6% were submitted to surgery and 34.1% received radiotherapy.
Publicações 41
Performance Status (PS) of subjects was: PS0 35.3%, PS1 51.8%, PS2 11.8%,
PS3 1.2% and PS4 0%.
Administration of FACT-F
Regarding the way of administration the instrument, 36.5% self
administered and 63.5% were interviewed by a researcher. Self-adminstration
were carried out by patients younger than those interviewed (age average 47.42
versus 52.81; p = 0.048). Figure 1 compares the distribution of educational level
and performance status according to the application of the questionnaire.
Interviewed patients had less educational level (elementary and secondary
school) (p <0,001). On the other hand, there was no statistically significant
difference in performance status between the two different ways of applying the
questionnaire (p=0.24).
0
EDUCATIONAL LEVEL
CollegeSecondaryElementary
NU
MB
ER
40
30
20
10
NU
MB
ER
PERFORMANCE STATUS
3210
30
20
10
0
ADMINISTRATION MODE
Self-administration
Interview0
EDUCATIONAL LEVEL
CollegeSecondaryElementary
NU
MB
ER
40
30
20
10
NU
MB
ER
PERFORMANCE STATUS
3210
30
20
10
0
ADMINISTRATION MODE
Self-administration
Interview
Figure 1 - Educational level and performance status of patients according to the
FACT-F administration mode
Publicações 42
Reproducibility
Table 1 shows the average, intraclass correlation coefficients and Pearson
correlation of scores obtained in the different domains regarding the test and the
retest. No significant differences were observed on averages between the
domains for the first and the second interviews. Values found for ICC for the
domains varied between 0.72 for physical well-being and 0.91 for social/family
well-being; fatigue subscale reached 0.88 and FACT-F as a whole, 0.91.
Pearson correlation coefficient was excellent (r> 0.75) for all domains, except for
well-being physical, that presented a moderated correlation (r = 0.58). The
highest correlation found referred to social/family well-being (r = 0.84). The
correlation coefficient was excellent for FACT-F (r =0.85). These high correlation
coefficients indicate a high degree of stability in time, showing that there were no
significant changes in measures of quality of life and fatigue.
Table 1 - Average, intraclass correlation coefficient and Pearson correlation coefficients of scores of the different domains in test and retest (n=85)
Average (± SD) Domains (scores variation) Test Retest
Intraclass correlation (CI95%)
Pearson Correlation
Physical Well-Being (0-28) 22.70 (± 3.93) 21.69 (± 4.54) 0.72* (0.58-0.82) 0.58*
Social/Family Well-Being (0-28) 21.71 (± 4.12) 21,00 (± 4.33) 0.91* (0,86-0.94) 0.84*
Emotional Well-Being (0-24) 20.00 (± 4.42) 19.88 (± 4.09) 0.90* (0.86-0.94) 0.83*
Functional Well-Being (0-28) 18.94 (± 5.17) 17.99 (± 5.36) 0.86* (0.79-0.91) 0.76*
Subscale Fatigue (0-52) 41.43 (± 7.79) 41.26 (± 9.18) 0.88* (0.81-0.92) 0.79*
FACT-F (0-160) 124.79 (± 19.20) 121.01 (± 22.10) 0.91* (0.86-0.94) 0.85*
FACT-F: Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Fatigue; SD: standard deviation; CI: confidence interval. * p value <0.0001.
Publicações 43
Intraclass correlation did not vary regarding educational levels for the
physical well-being domain (elementary school: ICC=0.79, CI 95% = 0.61-0.89;
secondary: ICC=0.64. CI 95% = 0.25-0.82; college: ICC=0.58. CI 95% =0.35-0.87);
social/family well-being (elementary school: ICC=0.96. CI 95% = 0.94-0.98;
secondary school: ICC=0.81. CI 95% = 0.59-0.91; college: ICC=0.57. CI 95%
=0.27-0.86); emotional well-being (elementary school: ICC=0.94. CI 95% = 0.89-
0.97; secondary school: ICC=0.86. CI 95% = 0.71-0.93; college: ICC=0.75. CI
95% = 0.24-0.92); functional well-being (elementary school: ICC=0.89. CI 95% =
0.81-0.94; secondary school: ICC=0.76. CI 95% = 0.49-0.89; college: ICC=0.79
CI 95% = 0.36-0.93); subscale fatigue (elementary school: ICC=0.93. CI 95% =
0.87-0.96; secondary school: ICC=0.79, CI 95% = 0.57-0.90; college: ICC=0.65.
CI 95% =0.12-0.893) and for FACT-F (elementary school: ICC=0.94. CI 95% =
0.88-0.97; elementary school: ICC=0.80, CI 95% = 0.57-0.91; college: ICC=0.79,
CI 95% = 0.40-0.93).
As for the way of applying the questionnaire, there was no intraclass
correlation difference between domains: physical well-being (interviewed: ICC=0.83,
CI 95% = 0.49-0.83; self-administered: ICC=0.69, CI 95% = 0.36-0.85); social/family
well-being (interviewed: ICC=0.92, CI 95% = 0.87-0.96; self-applied: ICC=0.88,
CI 95% = 0.62-0.95); emotional well-being (interviewed: ICC=0.89, CI 95% =
0.81-0.93; self-applied: ICC=0.93, CI 95% = 0.85-0.96); functional well-being
(interviewed: ICC=0.87, CI 95% = 0.78-0.93; self-applied: ICC=0.83, CI 95% =
0.59-0.92); fatigue subscale (interviewed: ICC=0.91, CI 95% = 0.84-0.95; self-
applied: ICC=0.82, CI 95% = 0.63-0.91) nor for FACT-F (interviewed: ICC=0.93,
CI 95% = 0.88-0.96; self-applied: ICC=0.87, CI 95% = 0.61-0.94).
Publicações 44
Figure 2 presents Bland-Altman dispersal diagram showing the average
values of FACT-F scores (abscissa) and the individual differences between values
obtained in the test and in the retest (ordinate). The average of differences
found was 3.78 (standard deviation= 11.70) and the limits (average ± 2 standard
deviations) were +27.18 and -19.62. Most points are contained on the established
limits. An analysis of the difference between the averages of test and retest reveals
the distribution of the points to be concentrated near to average value of the
differences, and only two cases were higher than the superior limit and one less than
the inferior limit, thus confirming the good agreement between test and retest.
FACT-F Score (test-retest)160150140130120110100908070605040
FAC
T-F
Diff
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( tes
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50
40
30
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Mean
-2DP
FACT-F Score (test-retest)160150140130120110100908070605040
FAC
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( tes
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-2DP
Figure 2. Bland-Altman scatter plot for agreement between the test and retest of
the application of FACT-F questionnaire for the evaluation of fatigue and quality
of life in patients with cancer
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Discussion
Several instruments for evaluating quality of life in patients with cancer are
being developed in Europe and the United States mainly in the English
language30, 31. Using such an instrument in Brazil requires a trans-cultural adaptation
by using psychometric measures 32, 33. One of the stages for validating a
questionnaire is the test - retest of the version translated to Portuguese. In this
study the instrument FACT-F was applied to 85 patients with different types of
cancer. The participants of this research had mainly cancer in stages III and IV,
the profile of the population treated in INCA, where more than 50% of the
patients present advanced disease at diagnostic34.
Sixty three per cent of the individuals had chosen the interview; in it the
questionnaire was read and filled out by the interviewer, instead of self
administered. This can be due to the low educational levels and to the fact that
most patients are aged. The same happened in the study for validation of FACT-
G in Spanish for patients with cancer in Uruguay35.
We noticed no significant differences between the averages of the scores
of four analyzed domains of FACT-G and the fatigue subscale. Intraclass correlation
did not differ regarding educational levels and way of application.
Intraclass correlation coefficient was high for all domains, and the highest
intraclass correlation was obtained for the social/family well-being domain (ICC=0.91)
and the FACT-F questionnaire that obtained an excellent ICC (ICC=0.91). The
lowest correlation was observed in the physical well-being domain (ICC=0.72). As in
the study of Yellen et al.15 intraclass correlation was not calculated, a comparison is
not possible with the present study. We also observed that Bland-Altman scatter
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plot showed a small difference between the scores of the test and the retest,
because most points were inside the established limits.
Pearson correlation coefficients values found in the present study for
FACT-F (r=0.85) and the subscale fatigue (r=0.79) are lightly inferior to the
values of Pearson correlation coefficients observed for FACT-F (r=0.87) and the
subscale fatigue (r=0.90) in the validation study of the original FACT-F English
version questionnaire, published by Yellen et al.15, which applied it to 50 subjects
from 19 to 83 years of age, with test - retest in an interval from 3 to 7 days. In the
present study it was not possible to determine if this difference was due to instability
of the clinical condition of patients, since some retests were carried out up to 14 days
after test, when their condition might be equal, worse or better that in the day of test.
Although in the present study we used Pearson correlation coefficient,
mainly for comparing results obtained to those of already published studies, it is
known that it has limitations as a tool for evaluating agreement, for it evaluates
only linear relations between the variables and do not account for a systematic
bias26, 27, something that makes ICC preferable for evaluate reproducibility.
Besides, since in the second application the patient already knows the
instrument, reproducibility may be overestimated; conversely, the variations in the
health condition and in learning may underestimate it. In spite of these limits, the
analysis of reproducibility is important for the evaluation of the instrument’s stability 22.
Conclusion
This study demonstrated that the FACT-F instrument has a good reproducibility
test - retest in heterogeneous series of patients, with different types of cancer,
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performance status and staging, what allows it to be applied in Brazilian studies on
quality of life and fatigue in patients with cancer, making possible to compare the
results of evaluations and interventions with other studies carried out in the country.
Conflicts of Interest: None
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Dr. Ben Arnold and Dr. Helen Morrow for permitting
the use of the FACT-F instrument in this study and making available its
Portuguese language version. We also thank Sirlei Siani Morais for reviewing
the statistic analysis.
Collaborators
N M Ishikawa contributed in the preparation of the manuscript of the study,
data collection, editorial assistance, statistic analysis, discussion of results and final
approval of the text. L C S Thuler contributed to the review of the content of the
paper, statistic analysis, discussion of results and final approval of the text. AG Giglio
contributed for the choice of patients, data collection and has also taken part in the
final approval of the text. C S R Baldotto contributed for the choice of patients, data
collection and has also taken part in the final approval of the text. C J C Andrade
contributed for the choice patients, data collection and has also taken part in the
final approval of the text. S F M Derchain was responsible for conceiving and
designing the study, has taken part of the review of the content of the paper and
the final approval of the text.
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3.2. Artigo2
Validation of the Portuguese Version of Functional Assessment of Cancer
Therapy-Fatigue (FACT-F) in Brazilian Cancer Patients
Neli Muraki Ishikawa, Luiz Claudio Santos Thuler, Alessandra Grasso Giglio,
Clarissa Seródio da Rocha Baldotto, Carlos José Coelho de Andrade, Sophie
Françoise Mauricette Derchain
Neli Muraki Ishikawa Address for correspondence: Brazilian National Cancer Institute - INCA, Physical Therapy Department. Rua do Rezende, 128. Centro - Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil CEP 20231-092. e-mail: nelimuraki@gmail.com Luiz Claudio Santos Thuler Federal University of the State of Rio de Janeiro - UNIRIO. Rua Mariz e Barros, 775. Maracanã - Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil CEP 20270-004 e-mail: lthuler@gmail.com Alessandra Grasso Giglio Brazilian National Cancer Institute - INCA - Hospital of Cancer II, Rua Equador, 831 - Santo Cristo - Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil CEP 20220-410 e-mail: laxgiglio@bol.com.br Clarissa Seródio da Rocha Baldotto Brazilian National Cancer Institute – INCA, Clinical Oncology Department, Praça da Cruz Vermelha, nº23. Centro - Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil CEP 20230-130 e-mail: cbaldotto@gmail.com Carlos José Coelho de Andrade Brazilian National Cancer Institute - INCA, Clinical Oncology Department, Praça da Cruz Vermelha, nº23. Centro - Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil CEP 20230-130 e-mail: carlosj@inca.gov.br
Sophie Françoise Mauricette Derchain Campinas State University, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Rua Antônio Hossri, 629 Cidade Universitária, Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil CEP13083-370 e-mail: derchain@fcm.unicamp.br
Publicações 54
Artigo enviado em 23 de setembro de 2008 para a revista Supportive Care
in Cancer.
de Editorial Office <aschiess@sg.zetup.ch> para nelimuraki@gmail.com data 23 de setembro de 2008 13:19
assunto JSCC: Submission Confirmation for Validation of the
Portuguese Version of Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Fatigue (FACT-F) in Brazilian Cancer Patients
enviado por editorialmanager.com
Dear Mrs Ishikawa, Your submission entitled "Validation of the Portuguese Version of Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Fatigue (FACT-F) in Brazilian Cancer Patients" has been received by journal Supportive Care in Cancer You will be able to check on the progress of your paper by logging on to Editorial Manager as an author. The URL is http://jscc.edmgr.com/. Your manuscript will be given a reference number once an Editor has been assigned. Thank you for submitting your work to this journal. Kind regards, Editorial Office Supportive Care in Cancer
Publicações 55
Abstract
Goals of work: The purpose of this study was to validate the Portuguese version
of the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy – Fatigue in order to establish
properties including validity and reliability in a sample of Brazilian cancer patients.
Materials and methods: 270 patients with different types of cancer were included
for this study; the mean age was 50.5 years. The reliability was assessed by
internal consistency and reproducibility. Convergent validity was examined by
comparing the FACT-F to the SF-36. Discriminant validity of the FACT-F evaluated
the ability of the scale to differentiate defined group discriminating patients
according at ECOG Performance Status, and different stages of disease.
Main results: FACT-F had high internal consistency (Cronbach a coefficient was
0.78 for physical well-being, 0.68 for social/family well-being, 0.75 for emotional
well-being, 0.74 for functional well-being, 0.91 for fatigue, and 0.92 for total
FACT-F). The range of test-retest intraclass correlation was from 0.72 to 0.91
(p<0.0001). The Pearson product correlation revealed good correlations between
the total FACT-F and subscales of the SF-36 in most dimensions, ranging from
r=0.51 to r=0.76, except to SF- 36 physical (r=0.31). Theses correlations were
highly significant (p<0.001). The significant positive correlation between the
FACT-F total (r=0.76), fatigue subscale (r=0.77), and SF-36 vitality scale support
the convergent validity.
Conclusions: The Portuguese version of FACT-F is a reliable and valid instrument to
assess QOL and fatigue, representing a valid tool to screen cancer-related
fatigue in Brazilian cancer patients.
Key words: fatigue, quality of life, FACT-F, questionnaire, cancer
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Introduction
Fatigue is one the most frequently reported symptoms accompanying
cancer and its treatment [1]. Fatigue occurs between 1% and 94% in patients
with cancer, with frequency increasing significantly during chemotherapy and
radiotherapy [2]. Fatigue during cancer therapy can also have significant
adverse effects on a patient’s quality of life through its effects on anxiety and
depression [3, 4], pain [5, 6], sleep quality [7], and ability to carry on daily
activities [6]. Cancer-related fatigue not only interferes with daily activity, but
also has a great impact on quality of life [8].
At a research level, the assessment of fatigue is clearly necessary to
evaluate treatments. It is also necessary for the design of new approaches and
new ways to monitor the effectiveness of interventions, for the improvement of
clinicians’ knowledge and awareness of patients’ needs, and for the
development of appropriate strategies for individual patient care [9].
The Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy (FACIT)
Measurement System, under development since 1987, produced its 4th version
in November 1997 [10]. The FACIT system [11] includes the Functional
Assessment of Cancer Therapy (FACT), the Functional Assessment of Human
Immunodeficiency Virus Infection (FAHI), and the Functional Assessment of
Multiple Sclerosis (FAMS). The FACT scale is a well-documented scale for
measurements of quality of life (QOL) among cancer patients. The FACT-G
(General) scale [12] in combination with the “additional concerns” subscale
provides a disease-specific quality of life assessment for various cancers like
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prostate (FACT-P) [13], colorectal (FACT-C) [14], brain (FACT-Br) [15], lung
(FACT-L) [16], and etc. These questionnaires were developed in North America,
and many have been translated into almost 45 languages. One of the strengths
of this ongoing translation project is its use of input from patients, linguists,
psychologists and physicians internationally to assure that the wording of
Version 4 is more cross-culturally relevant and more sensitive to measuring the
psychosocial impact of illness in cultures outside the United States [11].
FACT-F [17] was especially developed to measure fatigue in cancer
populations. The FACT-F (version 4) is a 40 item compilation, subdivided into
four primary QOL domains and a disease-specific, domain-additional concern
(fatigue). Accurate assessment of QOL, including the component expressed as
fatigue or influenced by fatigue, is important when evaluating comparative
treatments, making decisions about future treatments, and in palliative care [17].
The value of accurate QOL assessment is twofold: (a) it allows for an immediate
understanding of an individual patient’s current status (making it a potentially
useful intervention tool); and (b) it allows for measurement of change over time,
making it a useful outcome tool [18]. Subscale was developed between May
1994 and October 1994 and validated in 1997 with American patients.
Development of the subscale occurred in two phases: item development (which
included item generation, followed by item reduction and subscale validation).
The FACIT translation methodological attempts to attain the five
dimensions of equivalence, namely, semantic/linguistic, content, conceptual,
criterion, and technical dimensions, in cross-cultural translation [19].
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The FACT-G was originally designed in English and was submitted to a
Portuguese translation, which included two forward translations, one reconciled
version, a back-translation of the reconciled version, and four independent
reviews by bilingual experts. There was an equal representation from Brazil and
Portugal, with one forward translator and two reviewers from each country. Only
one Portuguese language version was developed for use in both Brazil and
Portugal [20, 21]. Meanwhile this version has not been validated for the Brazilian
population.
The purpose of this study was to validate the Portuguese version of the
FACT-F and establish properties including validity and reliability in a sample of
Brazilian cancer patients.
Patients and methods
276 patients were selected for this study, six patients refused to
participate; reasons for that include lack of time or feeling of illness, the final
sample validation sample consisted of 270 participants. The validity of FACT-F
was established by evaluating the convergent and discriminant validities. The
convergent validity was examined by comparing the FACT-F to the MOS 36-
Item Short-Form Health Survey SF-36 [22, 23]; both instruments measures the
health-related QOL. The SF-36 is a known valid and reliable QOL instrument
and was validated in Brazil [24]. Discriminant validity of the FACT-F evaluated
the ability of the scale to differentiate defined group discriminating patients
according at ECOG Performance Status, and different stages of disease. The
reliability was assessed by internal consistency and reproducibility.
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Participants/Subjects
Study patients were selected from the Oncology Department of the
Brazilian National Cancer Institute (INCA). Data was collected between
September 2005 and June 2006. The inclusion criteria were to be 18 years of
age or older and to be in cancer treatment with chemotherapy or hormone
therapy. Exclusion criteria included: pregnancy; subjects with more than one
diagnosis of cancer; and patients with a psychiatric diagnosis.
This study was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the
Brazilian National Cancer Institute; participation was voluntary and a written
informed consent was obtained before completion of the instruments. Eligible
oncology patients were asked to participate in a interview designed to elicit a
variety of information using a structured interview format pertinent to
sociodemographic information. The disease and treatment information was also
collected from the patient’s medical file. The mode of administration of the
FACT-F (self-administration vs. read in interview) was registered in 270 cases.
Instruments
The validation packet of questionnaires administered to all participants
included the FACT-F [17], MOS 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36) [22,
23], Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status Rating
[25].
FACT-F [17, 18], version 4 consists of a 40 item self-report instrument
that includes 40 likert-type items in 4 scale that assess a quality of life across
the domains of physical well-being (seven items), which is the patient’s actual
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physical experience of a disease and/or treatment, including disease symptoms
and treatment side effects; social/family well-being (seven items), which
encompasses activities with and support from family and friends; emotional well-
being (six items), which refers not only to emotional distress, but also to positive
well-being or life happiness; and functional well-being (seven items), which
refers to a person’s ability to engage in the usual basic activities of daily living;
and one scale with 13 item fatigue that assess fatigue. Subjects were asked to
respond to each item with a score from 0 to 4, where 0= not all, 1= a little bit, 2=
somewhat, 3= quite a bit, and 4= very much. The possible range of scores is
from 0 to 160. A higher score indicates a higher level of QOL and lower level of
fatigue.
MOS 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36) [22, 23]: consists of 36
questions designed to measure health status and QOL domains, designed for
use in clinical practice and research, health policy evaluations, and general
population surveys. Eight health-related concepts are included in this instrument
and are as follows: physical functioning (limitations in physical activities because
of health problems); social functioning (limitations in social activities because of
physical or emotional problems); role limitations due to physical functioning
(limitations in usual role activities because of physical health problems); body
pain; general health perceptions; vitality (energy and fatigue); role limitations
caused by emotional problems; and mental health (psychological distress and
well-being). The SF36 vitality scale is a four item measure which asks the
respondent to indicate on a six-point frequency scale (1= all of the time and
6=none of the time) the extent to which the person feels full of energy versus
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feeling tired and worn out during the previous 4 weeks. Scores are calculated
and transformed to a 0 to 100 scale, with higher scores indicating increased
health status.
Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status (PS)
[25] is a five-point scale ranging scores from 0 (fully ambulatory without physical
symptoms), 1 (fully ambulatory with some symptoms), 2 (requiring <50% awake
time to rest), 3 (requiring >50% awake time to rest), to 4 (bedridden). It is widely
used in cancer patient trials to assess functional capability of patients as they
undergo treatment. It is used as an independent prognostic predictor in patients
with cancer. The ECOG PS item was included because it is a familiar,
somewhat global index.
Questionnaire for Demographic and Disease Information, a demographic
information sheet that covers basic patient information such as age, sex,
educational level, and marital status. A disease sheet covers a patient’s
diagnosis, treatment status and clinical stage.
Statistical Methods/Analysis
Reliability: The internal consistency of FACT-F was evaluated by
calculating the Cronbach a coefficients for both the sub scores and for the total
scores of the instruments [26]. The Cronbach a coefficient ranges from 0 to 1,
the acceptable Cronbach coefficient was set at approximately 0.70 in
accordance with the recommendations of Nunnally and Berenstein [27]. The
coefficients obtained in our population were compared with those obtained by
Yellen in another cancer population [17]. Reproducibility (test-retest) assesses
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stability of the instrument over time. This was assessed by intraclass correlation
coefficients (ICC) between the first and the second assessment for the same
patient.
Validity: Validity was assessed by comparing the subscale scores and
total scores of FACT-F with those of the SF-36, and using Pearson product
moment correlation coefficient, and SF-36 vitality subscale comparing FACT-F
fatigue subscale. It was expected that there would be a relatively high
correlation between the FACT-F, fatigue subscale, and SF-36 vitality subscale.
Discriminant (known- groups) validity of the FACT-F was evaluating the
ability of the scale to differentiate defined group discriminating patients
according to ECOG PS, and different stages of disease. All subscales and total
FACT-F sample were divided into three levels (PS=0, 1, and = 2), due to the
small number, patients rated “3” or “4” on ECOG PS were combined with
individuals rated “=2”. Scheffé post-hoc comparisons were tested to show
differences in FACT-F total and subscale scores according to ECOG PS and
stage of illness. It was expected that better performance status and stage I
would be associated with higher QOL. All analyses were performed using
Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) 13.0.. For all tests, a
significance level of 0.05 was chosen, and all p were two-tailed.
Results
Demographic and Clinical Characteristics of the Participants
Six patients refused to participate; reasons for that include lack of time or
feeling of illness. The validation sample consisted of 270 participants, of whom
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201(74.4%) were women and 146 (54.1%) were married. The mean age of the
patients was 50.5 years, with a range of 19-82 years; 141 (52.2%) were white,
164 (60.7%) had attended = 8 year of educational level. Patients represented a
broad spectrum of disease, and the majority had diagnosed breast cancer
(50%); had stage III (37.0%) and had performance status 1 (54.8%). All patients
were currently undergoing chemotherapy and 32.2 % were in radiotherapy.
Demographic and clinical information is available in Table 1.
Although the FACT-F was designed for self-administration, most patients
(N=211, 78.1%) in our sample were interviewed due to low educational level.
Reliability
Internal consistency was evaluated by calculating the Cronbach a
coefficient, which was 0.78 for physical well-being, 0.68 for social/family well-
being, 0.75 for emotional well-being, 0.74 for functional well-being, 0.91 for
fatigue, and 0.92 for total FACT-F, indicating satisfactory internal consistency.
Table 2 shows alpha coefficient and mean of FACT-G for the Brazilian
Portuguese version.
Test-retest reliability involved administration of 85 retest administration of
the FACT-F within 3-14 days. The test-retest [28] was assessed by intraclass
correlation (ICC) between the first and the second assessments for the same
patient, the coefficients were 0.72 (95% CI=0.58-0.82) for physical well-being,
0.91 (0.86-0.94) for social/family well-being, 0.90 (0.86-0.94) for emotional well-
being, 0.86 (0.79-0.91) for functional well-being, 0.90 (0.81-0.92) for fatigue, and
0.91 (0.86-0.94) for total FACT-F.
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Validity
The Pearson product correlation revealed good correlations between the
total FACT-F and subscales of the SF-36 in most dimensions (Table 3)., ranging
from r = 0.51 to r =0.76, except for SF- 36 physical (r = 0.31). As expected, the
significant positive correlation between the FACT-F total (r = 0.76), fatigue
subscale (r = 0.77), and SF-36 vitality scale support the convergent validity,
confirming that they are measuring the same domain, fatigue. Intercorrelations
among subscales and the total scores of fatigue, means, and standard
deviations appear in Table 3. Pearson correlation coefficients were high
between the FACT-F total score and its subscale scores, ranging from r = 0.50
to r =0.88.
Discriminant validity was examined by ECOC PS and stage of illness in
relation to the subscales and total FACT-F. It was shown in Table 4 that the
subjects who scored higher on the FACT-F had a better PS. Scheffé post-hoc
comparisons suggested that physical, functional, fatigue subscale and total
FACT-F were able do discriminate between PS=0 versus 1, =2 and PS=1 versus
=2 (p <0.001), social/family well-being was able to discriminate PS=0 versus =2
(p < 0.018), and emotional well-being was able to discriminate PS=0, 1 versus
=2 (p <0.001). Scheffé post-hoc comparisons suggested that physical,
emotional, functional, fatigue subscale, and total FACT-F were able to
discriminate between stage of disease = I, II, III versus IV, (p < 0.001) reflecting
a poorer QOL, but not in social/family well-being where the scores wasn’t
significant to differentiate between stage differences (p =0.470) (Table 4).
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Discussion
FACT-F [17, 18] was designed to provide information about fatigue and
quality of life. The FACT-F was translated also into Japanese and the
psychometric properties have been established [29].
The purpose of this study was to validate the Portuguese version of the
FACT-F for use with Brazilian cancer patients. In the previous study [28] it was
assessed the FACT-F reproducibility in 85 Brazilian cancer patients and 36,5%
of the cases the questionnaire was self administered, and in 63.5% of the cases
they had been read by interviewer and filled after verbal answer. FACT-F
questionnaire in Portuguese language has good test-retest reproducibility in
patients with different types of cancer, performance status and stages.
The internal consistencies of FACT-F and fatigue subscale were highly
satisfactory. With the exception of reduced social and family well-being, the
results indicated good reliability. The lower Cronbach coefficient noted for social
and family well-being is consistent with a previous study [12]. The findings in the
internal consistency of FACT-F and fatigue subscale respectively in Brazilian
(0.91, 0.92), American (0.93, 0.95) [17], and Japanese (0.93, not avalilable) [29]
samples are very similar. The results show little differences and might reflect
cultural differences and not a true difference in fatigue experience. Another
explanation is based on the difference in disease presentation between the
samples. Half of the Brazilian sample consists of women with breast cancer,
whereas a quarter of the American sample, and the Japanese sample consists
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only of lung cancer patients. All patients of this study were outpatients and
Yoshimura et al study [29] was inpatients.
In the Yellen et al study [17] the 13 item Fatigue subscale of the FACT-F
demonstrated good reliability and test-retest reproducibility, suggesting an ability
to be used as an independent, brief, unidimensional measure of fatigue. The
same was observed in this study was that FACT-F and fatigue subscale
demonstrated excellent test-retest reproducibility (0.90 for Fatigue subscale and
0.91 for Total FACT-F). Researchers and clinicians interested only in assessing
fatigue as a symptom might choose to use the 13 item Fatigue subscale,
whereas those interested in assessing both fatigue and quality of life would use
the 40 item FACT-F [17].
Convergent validity of the Brazilian Portuguese version of the total FACT-
F and Fatigue Subscale was supported by the correlation with the SF-36 ( r=
0.31-0.76), and mainly vitality scale ( r= 0.76).
The FACT-F has excellent known-group validity, which can accurately
discriminate patients with different performance status and fatigue mean scores
[17]. A lower fatigue score was associated with a reduction in activity and with
increased emotional distress. Patients with high ECOG PS and patients with
cancer metastasized reported lower FACT-F scores than patients with low
ECOG PS and localized tumor. Post hoc comparisons (Scheffé Test) suggested
that all subscales and total scores except social/family well-being were
successfully discriminated between PS=0 versus 1 versus 2. This study (Table
4) and that of Yellen et al [17] and Overcash et al [30] showed that a major
influencer of QOL is ECOG PS. In the Yoshimura et al [29] validation study, they
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also reported significantly negative relationship between performance status and
the score of the Fatigue subscale.
With regard to the limitations of this study, we had no control group to
differentiate between cancer-related-fatigue and non-cancer-related fatigue. In
addition, FACT was applied only in outpatients. The Brazilin sample included
patients at different moments of the treatment process, presumably representing
a greater variety of fatigue intensities, which could be reflected in lower average
scores.
As more and more patients survive cancer, it becomes necessary to
understand the multidimensional experiences of fatigue associated with the
disease, treatment, and recovery process. The findings demonstrate that the
FACT-F is a measure with strong psychometric properties for use in assessing
fatigue and QOL in cancer patients. The FACT-F is the first instrument
measuring fatigue in Brazilian cancer patients and showed excellent reliability
and validity.
Conclusion
The Portuguese version of FACT-F showed high internal consistency,
good test-retest reproducibility, as well as convergent validity. FACT-F
successfully discriminated patients based on performance status, and clinical
stage of cancer, and were positively correlated with the other measure of fatigue
validated for use in Brazilian patients (SF 36 vitality scale). Therefore, the
Portuguese version of FACT-F is a reliable and valid instrument to assess QOL
and fatigue, representing a valid tool to screen cancer related fatigue in Brazilian
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cancer patients and will allow study results to be compared across different
countries.
Acknowledgements
The authors are grateful to Mr. Ben Arnold and Ms. Helen Morrow for
permission to use the instrument FACT-F in this study and for having provided
the questionnaire in Portuguese language. We also thank to Mrs. Sirlei Siani
Morais for help in statistical review. Finally, we are grateful to all patients who
participated in the study.
Authors’ Disclosures of Potential Conflicts of Interest
Authors wish to disclose the absence of financial support and indicated
no potential conflicts of interest.
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Table 1. Demographic and Clinical Characteristics of the Validation Sample (N= 270)
Sample Characteristics N %
Age Mean ± SD (range) 50.5 ±11.8 (19-82)
Gender Female 201 74.4 Male 69 25.6
Race/Ethnicity White 141 52.2 Black 51 18.9 Asian 2 0.7 Mulatto 76 28.2
Marital Status Married 146 54.1 Separated/Divorced 33 12.2 Single 56 20.7 Widowed 35 13.0
Educational Level = 8 year 164 60.7 9-11 years 72 26.7 > 11 years 34 12.6
Disease site Breast 135 50.0 Colorectal 42 15.5 Lymphoma 33 12.2 Lung 18 6.7 Sarcoma 13 4.8 Stomach 7 2.6 Testicle 5 1.9 Others * 17 6.3
Stage I 10 3.7 II 74 27.4 III 100 37.0 IV 86 31.9
Performance Status 0 (fully ambulatory without physical symptoms) 85 31.5 1 (fully ambulatory with some symptoms) 148 54.8 2 (requiring <50% awake time to rest) 30 11.1 3 (requiring >50% awake time to rest) 6 2.2 4 (bedridden) 1 0.4
Treatment Surgery 145 53.7 Chemotherapy 270 100.0 Radiotherapy 87 32.2 Hormone therapy 11 4.1
*Others: Head and Neck (4), Myeloma (3), Ewing/PNET (2), Melanoma (3), Bladder(3), Thymoma (1), Pancreas (1).
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Table 2. Internal Consistency Reliabilities and Mean of FACT-F in this Study
Subscale (Range of Scores) Nº of Items Brazilian Portuguese FACT-F (N=270)
Mean ± SD a
Physical (0-28) 7 21.85 ± 4.86 0.78
Social/Family (0-28) 7 21.12 ± 3.91 0.68
Emotional (0-24) 6 19.61 ± 4.00 0.75
Functional (0-28) 7 17.87 ± 5.13 0.74
Fatigue Subscale (0-52) 13 39.86 ± 9.10 0.91
FACT-F (0-160) 40 120.41± 20.95 0.92
FACT-F: Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Fatigue Scale
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Table 3. Pearson Correlation between FACT-F and SF-36 Subscale Scores
(Vitality Scale as an Indication of the Convergent Validity of the FACT-F) (N= 270)
Physical
FACT-F Social
FACT-F Emotional
FACT-F Functional
FACT-F
Fatigue subscale FACT-F
Total FACT-F
Physical 1.00 0.18 0.53 0.52 0.74 0.82
Social FACT-F 1.00 0.33 0.47 0.22 0.50
Emotional FACT-F 1.00 0.51 0.49 0.71
Functional FACT-F 1.00 0.58 0.80
Fatigue subscale FACT-F 1.00 0.88
SF- 36 Physical 0.23 0.14 0.11 0.33 0.30 0.31
SF- 36 Role Physical Functional 0.48 0.091 0.32 0.44 0.56 0.54
SF- 36 Body Pain 0.57 0.21 0.32 0.43 0.45 0.53
SF- 36 General Health 0.38 0.24 0.38 0.46 0.44 0.51
SF- 36 Vitality 0.65 0.25 0.56 0.52 0.77 0.76
SF- 36 Social Functioning 0.52 0.26 0.43 0.47 0.56 0.61
SF- 36 Role Emotional 0.46 0.24 0.38 0.39 0.52 0.55
SF- 36 Mental Health 0.51 0.28 0.69 0.40 0.52 0.63
FACT-F: Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Fatigue Scale; SF-36 MOS Short Form Health Survey.
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Table 4. FACT-F Differentiation of ECOG Performance Status and Stage of Disease
Clinical
Condition N Physical
FACT-F Social
FACT-F Emotional
FACT-F Functional
FACT-F
Fatigue subscale FACT-F
Total FACT-F
Performance Status*
0 85 24.60±2.49 21.95±3.80 20.92±2.80 20.46±4.40 45.65±4.61 133.57±12.15 1 148 21.68±4.24 20.95±3.81 19.79±3.58 17.56±4.74 39.28±8.15 119.26±18.00 =2 37 16.24±6.19 19.86±4.20 15.86±5.50 13.15±4.55 29.65±10.53 94.77±22.82 P < 0.001 0.018 < 0.001 < 0.001 < 0.001 < 0.001 Subgroup Differences†
0>1>2 0>2 0>2, 1>2 0>1>2 0>1>2 0>1>2
Stage of Disease
I 10 23.80±3.74 22.40±2.95 21.00±2.67 20.90±3.48 47.60±4.70 135.70±11.88 II 74 22.82±4.08 21.02±4.01 20.20±2.90 18.68±3.80 40.89±7.81 123.61±16.23 III 100 22.51±4.14 21.40±3.65 20.45±3.24 18.51±5.52 41.30±7.99 124.17±18.81 IV 86 20.03±5.82 20.72±4.19 17.97±5.13 16.07±5.36 36.72±10.62 111.51±24.53 P < 0.001 0.470 < 0.001 < 0.001 < 0.001 < 0.001 Subgroup Differences†
I, II, III > IV - I, II, III > IV I, II, III > IV I>II, III > IV I, II, III > IV
FACT-F: Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Fatigue Scale. *Performance Status: 0, fully ambulatory without physical symptoms; 1, fully ambulatory with some symptoms; 2, requiring <50% awake time to rest; 3, requiring >50% awake time to rest; 4, bedridden.
†Scheffé comparisons; > symbol separates groups that report significantly higher scores from those with lower scores.
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3.3. Artigo 3
FATIGUE AND HEALTH-RELATED QUALITY OF LIFE DURING 6 CYCLES OF CHEMOTHERAPY IN BREAST CANCER PATIENTS
Neli Muraki Ishikawa, Luiz Claudio Santos Thuler, Eli Yanase, Maria de Fátima Rodrigues B Ventura, Luiz Guilherme Pinheiro Branco, and Sophie Françoise Mauricette Derchain. Neli Muraki Ishikawa Brazilian National Cancer Institute - INCA, Physical Therapy Department. Rua do Rezende, 128. Centro - Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil CEP 20231-092. e-mail: nelimuraki@gmail.com Luiz Claudio Santos Thuler Federal University of the State of Rio de Janeiro - UNIRIO. Rua Mariz e Barros, 775. Maracanã - Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil CEP 20270-004 e-mail: lthuler@gmail.com Eli Yanase Brazilian National Cancer Institute - INCA - Hospital of Cancer III, Nursing Department, Rua Visconde de Santa Isabel, 831 - Vila Isabel - Rio de Janeiro – RJ. Brasil CEP 20560-120 e-mail: Maria de Fátima Rodrigues B Ventura Brazilian National Cancer Institute - INCA, Hospital of Cancer III, Nursing Department, Rua Visconde de Santa Isabel, 831 - Vila Isabel - Rio de Janeiro – RJ. Brasil CEP 20560-120 e-mail: Luiz Guilherme Pinheiro Branco Brazilian National Cancer Institute - INCA, Hospital of Cancer III, Clinical Oncology Department, Rua Visconde de Santa Isabel, 831 - Vila Isabel - Rio de Janeiro – RJ. Brasil CEP 20560-120 e-mail: Sophie Françoise Mauricette Derchain Address for correspondence: Campinas State University, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Rua Antônio Hossri, 629 Cidade Universitária, Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil CEP13083-370 e-mail: derchain@fcm.unicamp.br
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ABSTRACT
Purpose: To assess patients before the start of chemotherapy, and after cycle 3
and 6 of chemotherapy in order to identify changes in fatigue that could occur
following the initiation of chemotherapy in a sample of breast cancer patients from
the Brazilian National Cancer Institute; to determine the relationship between
fatigue and health related-quality of life (HRQOL); to compare fatigue and HRQOL
in relation a patient’s physical activity and smoking history. Materials and
methods: 188 patients with breast cancer were included in this study with the
mean age being 49.0 years. Fatigue level was measured before and during
adjuvant or neoadjuvant cyclophosphamide/doxorubicin/5-fluorouracil chemotherapy
regimen using the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue
(FACIT-F) instrument, a higher score indicates a lower level of fatigue and better
HRQOL. Results: There was a significant decrease in mean FACT-F, fatigue
subscale, FACT-G, and physical well-being scores between the start of the
treatment and after cycle 3. The indications then appeared to plateau at cycle 6
reflecting maintenance in fatigue symptoms and lower quality of life in breast
cancer patients. The emotional well-being scores increased slightly between the
start of chemotherapy and after cycle 3 and remained a plateau at cycle 6, while
social/family well-being scores showed no differences before and during
chemotherapy. Fatigue was related to lower health-related quality of life. Fatigue
subscale score in smoking patients decreased significantly from before and after 6
cycle of chemotherapy. FACT-G score before and after chemotherapy in active/very
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active patients was slightly higher compared to sedentary/insufficiently active patients
(no statistical significance). Fatigue subscale score in sedentary/insufficiently
active patients decreased significantly more than active/very active patients.
Conclusions: Fatigue increased and worsened in health-related quality of life in
breast cancer submitted to chemotherapy. Fatigue affects the health related-
quality of life during chemotherapy.
Keywords: Fatigue; Quality of Life; Breast Cancer; Chemotherapy
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INTRODUCTION
Breast cancer is a problem of public health issue, because of its incidence
and mortality. The number of new cases of breast cancer expected in Brazil in
2008 is 49.400, with an estimated risk of 51 cases for each 100 thousand women,
according to estimates made by the Brazilian National Cancer Institute1.
Technological advances in early diagnosis and treatment of cancer have
increased the survival chance of patients. Increasing numbers of women are being
treated with chemotherapy and recent research has shown the importance of the
patient’s point of view on the goals of medical care. Health-related quality of life
(HRQOL) has recently become an important endpoint of clinical studies2.
Overall, the most frequently experienced side effects in women receiving
chemotherapy for breast cancer are fatigue, nausea and vomiting, taste change,
and difficulty sleeping 3.
Fatigue is a major cause of reduced quality of life in cancer patients4.
Fatigue is difficult to describe and patients express it in a variety of ways, using terms
such as tired, weak, exhausted, lazy, weary, worn-out, heavy, or slow. Likewise,
health professionals struggle to describe fatigue, using terms such as asthenia,
lassitude, malaise, prostration, exercise intolerance, lack of energy, and weakness5.
Fatigue is one of the most common symptoms reported by women
undergoing chemotherapy or radiotherapy 6, 7 for breast cancer and may persist
for months and even years following treatment 8,9. Fatigue affects about 94% of
patients with breast cancer, this frequency increasing significantly during
chemotherapy and radiotherapy 10.
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The cancer-related fatigue experience can include affective, cognitive,
behavioral, physiological, economic, and social sequelae, making its impact on
health-related quality of life multidimensional 4, 11.
The fatigue is approximately 1.5 times more severe among the former
chemotherapy patients than non-cancer subjects. Former chemotherapy patients
reported greater interference with their ability to work and concentrate because
of fatigue, as well as greater overall interference with quality of life 12.
A large number of scales have been developed attempting to measure the
nature, severity, and impact of fatigue in a range of clinical populations, and Minton and
Stone13 related 14 scales to assess fatigue, the most common questionnaires were the
Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Fatigue (FACT-F), the European
Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire
(EORTC QLQ C30) (fatigue subscale) and the Fatigue Questionnaire (FQ).
The FACT-G has been used extensively in clinic-based evaluations of
individual patients. Instruments like the FACT-G, relatively brief, multidimensional
questionnaires, are designed primarily for group comparisons, but individual
assessment using the FACT-G has been helpful to patients and clinicians attempting
to estimate change over time 14. Because fatigue has an impact on the patient’s
quality of life, studies on this treatment-related side effect are of relevance to
cancer management 15.
Knowledge of symptom prevalence is important in clinical practice to
anticipate problems and needs of patients; to plan care for patients; and to educate
clinical staff to focus on particular symptoms16. This is the first study that assesses
the fatigue in Brazilian breast cancer patients during the adjuvant and neoadjuvant
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chemotherapy using FACT-F and it is important to know the fatigue symptom to
establish an effective care system for patients.
The purpose of this study was (1) to assess patients before the start of
chemotherapy, and after cycle 3 and 6 of chemotherapy in order to identify changes
in fatigue and quality of life that could occur following the initiation of chemotherapy in
a sample of breast cancer patients from the Brazilian National Cancer Institute; (2) to
determine the relationship between fatigue and HRQOL; and (3) to compare fatigue
and HRQOL in relation a patient’s physical activity and smoking history.
PATIENTS AND METHODS
This study was prospective and longitudinal in design. Breast cancer patients
in the Clinical Oncology Department of the Brazilian National Cancer Institute with
stage II or III referred to receive a minimum of six cycles of adjuvant or neoadjuvant
chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide/doxorubicin/5-fluorouracil (CAF) regimen
were invited to participate. Neoadjuvant patients received CAF chemotherapy after a
biopsy to confirm invasive disease and after clinical staging. Adjuvant patients
received CAF chemotherapy after clinical staging and definitive surgical treatment
with either lumpectomy or mastectomy. Consecutive sampling was used to accrue
the sample. Data was collected between January 2006 and March 2007.The inclusion
criteria were to be 30-70 years old and to have a performance status rating of 0-
2. Exclusion criteria included: pregnancy; subjects with more than one diagnosis
of cancer; history of treatment with radiotherapy; and patients with a psychiatric
diagnosis and have chronic pulmonary disease and severe cardiac disorders. Data
collection occurred prospectively over 3 points in time, FACT-F questionnaires
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were completed before starting cycle 1 of chemotherapy and after cycle 3 and 6 of
chemotherapy. 188 participants were included in this study, of whom 11 (5.9%) had
progression of the disease and had changed their treatment plans, and 20
(10.6%) didn’t complete 6 cycles of chemotherapy (discontinued participation in
the study prior to completing all assessments). The final sample for analysis
consisted of 157 patients.
This study was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the Brazilian
National Cancer Institute; participation was voluntary and a written informed consent
was obtained during an outpatient Clinic Oncology visit prior to the start of
chemotherapy and before completion of the instrument. Eligible breast cancer
patients were asked to participate in a brief interview designed to elicit a variety
of information using a structured interview format pertinent to sociodemographic
information. The disease and treatment information was also collected from the
patient’s medical file.
Measures
The questionnaire administered to all participants included the FACT-F 17, 18,
and Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status Rating 19.
Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Fatigue (FACT-F) 17,18, version 4
consists of a 40 item self-report instrument that includes 40 likert-type items in 4
scale that assesses a quality of life across the domains of physical well-being
(seven items), which is the patient’s actual physical experience of a disease and/or
treatment, including disease symptoms and treatment side effects; social/family
well-being (seven items), which encompasses activities with and support from
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family and friends; emotional well-being (six items), which refers not only to
emotional distress, but also to positive well-being or life happiness; and functional
well-being (seven items), which refers to a person’s ability to engage in the usual
basic activities of daily living; and one scale with 13 item fatigue that assesses
fatigue with scores ranging from 0 to 52. Subjects were asked to respond to each
item with a score from 0 to 4, where 0=not all, 1=a little bit, 2=somewhat, 3=quite a
bit, and 4=very much. The possible range of scores is from 0 to 160. A higher
score indicates a lower level of fatigue and better HRQOL. FACT-F was validated to
the Portuguese in Brazilian cancer patients21 and showed high internal consistency
(Cronbach a coefficient was 0.78 for physical well-being, 0.68 for social/family
well-being, 0.75 for emotional well-being, 0.74 for functional well-being, 0.91 for
fatigue subscale, and 0.92 for total FACT-F and good test-retest reproducibility
(intraclass correlation 0.72 - 0.91).
The Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status
(PS)19 is a five-point scale ranging scores from 0 (fully ambulatory without physical
symptoms), 1 (fully ambulatory with some symptoms), 2 (requiring <50% awake time
to rest), 3 (requiring >50% awake time to rest), to 4 (bedridden). It is widely used in
cancer patient trials to assess functional capability of patients as they undergo
treatment. It is used as an independent prognostic predictor in patients with cancer.
The ECOG PS item was included because it is a familiar, somewhat global index.
The Demographic and Disease Information is a demographic information
sheet that covers basic patient information such as age, race/ethnicity, educational
level, marital status, levels of physical activity, and smoking history.
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Levels of physical activity was classified20 in: Very Active: = 30
minutes/session of vigorous activity = 5 days/week; and/or = 20 minutes/session
of vigorous activity = 3 days/week added up to = 30 minutes/session of
moderate activities or walking = 5 days/week; Active: = 20 minutes session of
vigorous activity = 3 days/week, and/or activities of moderate activities or
walking = 5 days/week or = 150 minutes per week of any activities; Insufficiently;
Active: < 150 minutes/week and > 10 minutes/week of any activities; and
Sedentary: = 10 minutes per week of any activities.
Smoking history was classified in: non-smoker, former smoker and
current smoker. A disease sheet covers the stage of disease, treatment status
and body mass index.
Statistical Methods/Analysis
Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) version 13.0 was used for
all statistical analyses. The Wilcoxon signed ranks test was performed to evaluate
differences between before starting cycle 1 of chemotherapy and after cycle 3, and
after cycle 3 and 6 of chemotherapy; to compare groups of patients between
neoadjuvant versus adjuvant chemotherapy, with decreased, unchanged, and
increased fatigue and health-related quality of life at a given measurement; and
to compare fatigue and HRQOL in relation a patient’s physical activity and
smoking history.
Pearson’s correlation coefficients were used to examine the relationship
between fatigue subscale scores and FACT-G scores (total and in the different
domains) to time before chemotherapy, after cycle 3, and after cycle 6. Pearson
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correlation coefficient was classified in the following way: 0-0.25 - not correlated;
0.25-0.50 - weak correlation; 0.50-0.75 - moderated to good correlation; >0.75
very good to excellent correlation 22.
For all tests, a significance level of 0.05 was chosen, and all p were two-tailed.
RESULTS
One hundred seven patients completed 6 cycles of cyclophosphamide
/doxorubicin/5-fluorouracil (CAF) chemotherapy in current study, 84 (53.5%)
were white and 79 (50.3%) were married. The mean age of the patients was 49.0
years, with a range of 30-69 years; 90 (57.3%) had attended = 8 year of educational
level; 76 had stage IIIB (48.4%); 108 had performance status 1 (68.8%). All patients
received CAF regimens of chemotherapy, 99 (62.4%) were in neoadjuvant
chemotherapy regimen; 38 (24.2%) had mastectomy; 104 (66.2%) were non-smoker;
131 (83.4%) were sedentary, and the mean body mass index was 28.1 with a
range of 16.6 - 41.2 Kg/m2. No patient received concurrent chemoradiotherapy.
Demographic and clinical information is available in Table 1.
The mode of administration of the FACT-F (self-administration vs. read in
interview) was registered in 157 cases, although the FACT-F was designed for
self-administration, 79 patients (50.3%) in our sample were interviewed due to
low educational level.
As shown in Table 2, there was a significant decrease in mean FACT-F,
fatigue subscale, FACT-G, and physical well-being scores between the start of the
treatment and after cycle 3 and then appeared to plateau at cycle 6 reflecting
maintenance in fatigue symptoms and lower quality of life in breast cancer
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patients. The emotional well-being scores increased a little between the start of
chemotherapy and after cycle 3 and remained a plateau at cycle 6, while
social/family well-being and functional well-being scores showed no differences
before and during chemotherapy.
Pearson correlation of scores was obtained between fatigue subscale and
FACT-G (total and in the different domains) to time before chemotherapy, after
cycle 3, and after cycle 6. Values found for Pearson correlation between fatigue
subscale and FACT-G were r=0.58 before chemotherapy, r=0.75 after cycle 3, and
r=0.75 after cycle 6; fatigue subscales between physical well-being was r=0.57
before chemotherapy, r=0.81 after cycle 3, and r=0.87 after cycle 6; fatigue
subscales between social/family well-being were r=0.32 before chemotherapy,
r=0.21 after cycle 3, and r=0.29 after cycle 6; fatigue subscales between emotional
well-being were r=0.28 to before chemotherapy, r=0.54 after cycle 3, and r=0.45
after cycle 6; and fatigue subscales between functional well-being were r=0.51
before chemotherapy, r=0.66 after cycle 3, and r=0.69 after cycle 6.
Figure 1 shows the differences in fatigue subscale and FACT-G scores
between physical activity with sedentary/insufficiently active (n=141), and active/very
active patients (n=16); before cycle1 and after cycles 3 and 6. FACT-G scores in
sedentary/insufficiently active patients decreased from 80.2±11.1 to 78.5±12.9
(p value=0.13) after cycle 3 and to 78.3±14.7 (p value=0.305) after cycle 6, while for
active/very active patients from 89.0±11.1 to 80.47±21.9 (p value=0.01) after cycle 3
and to 84.6±15.8 (p value=0.09) after cycle 6. This fall showed no statistical
significance. In contrast, Fatigue subscale score in sedentary/insufficiently active
patients decreased from 45.7±4.6 to 39.7 ±9.3 (p value<0.001) after cycle 3 and
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to 39.3±10.9 (p value<0.001) after cycle 6, while for active/very active patients
score from 46.6 ±7.1 to 39.3±14.4 (p value=0.01) after cycle 3 and to 42.0±9.6
(p value=0.07) after cycle 6.
We compared fatigue subscale and FACT-G scores before and after cycle 6
of chemotherapy, for patients with smoking history (non-smoker n=138; smoker
n=19). FACT-G scores for non-smoker decreased from 80.8±11.9 before
chemotherapy to 78.6±15.3 (p=0.145) after cycle 6, while for smoker patients the
score decreased from 83.4±7.2 to 81.2±11.8 (p=0.904) after cycle 6 chemotherapy.
In contrast, fatigue subscale in non-smoker patients decreased significantly from
45.7±5.1 to 39.8±10.4 (p value<0.001), while for smoker patients the score
decreased from 46.5 ±3.1 to 37.8±14.0 (p value=0.035).
Our sample was 157 patients with 99 patients submitted to neoadjuvant
chemotherapy and 58 to adjuvant chemotherapy. Values found for FACT-G
scores in neoadjuvant patients before chemotherapy were 82.1±11.4, 79.9±14.1
after cycle 3 and 78.5±14.7 after cycle 6. In adjuvant patients FACT-G scores
were 79.4±11.5, 76.5±13.7 after cycle 3, and 79.7±15.3 after cycle 6. Values
found for fatigue subscale scores in neoadjuvant patients before chemotherapy
were 46.4±5.1, 40.4±9.7 after cycle 3, and 39.2±11.0 after cycle 6. In adjuvant
patients fatigue subscale scores were 44.6±4.4, 38.6±10.0 after cycle 3, and
40.1±10.7 after cycle 6. Figure 2 presents the differences in fatigue subscale
and FACT-G scores between neoadjuvant and adjuvant chemotherapy patients.
According to Body Mass Index (BMI), patients with BMI<25 (n=42), BMI
25-29.9 (n=61) and BMI = 30 (n=54) were compared to fatigue subscale and FACT-G
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and there were no significant differences in scores before chemotherapy, and
after cycle 3 and cycle 6.
DISCUSSION
Fatigue is one of the most common symptoms reported by women
undergoing chemotherapy. This study assessed patients before the start of
chemotherapy, and after cycles 3 and 6 of chemotherapy in order to identify
changes in fatigue that could occur following the initiation of chemotherapy in a
sample of breast cancer patients from the Brazilian National Cancer Institute. In
this study FACT-F, FACT-G, fatigue subscale, and physical well-being mean
scores of breast cancer patients after cycle 3 of chemotherapy were significantly
lower compared to the start of chemotherapy. No significant difference was found in
fatigue and health quality of life between cycle 3 and cycle 6 of chemotherapy.
The common perception among patients and nurses that fatigue increase
over time while patients receive chemotherapy treatments was not supported by
Berger’s study 23. De Jong et al24 found in a literature review that fatigue in patients
with breast cancer receiving adjuvant chemotherapy was high and fluctuating rates of
fatigue during and after adjuvant chemotherapy and the intensity of fatigue seems to
be stable throughout the treatment cycles. The explanation is that patients become
accustomed to fatigue24. Some studies have shown similar observation, and were
evaluated in patients submitted to four cycles of chemotherapy regimens. Berger 23
showed in 72 women receiving chemotherapy after surgery in stage I-II breast
cancer, fatigue levels 48 hours after each of the first 3 chemotherapy cycles were not
significantly different over time. Jacobsen et al 25 also reported similar results in stage
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I-III breast cancer patients; the prevalence and severity of fatigue significantly
increased after the start of chemotherapy and remained elevated during the following
three cycles. Donovan et al 26 assessed fatigue in 134 women at the start of their
first, third, and final cycles of chemotherapy. Fatigue severity increased significantly
from the start of chemotherapy to the middle of chemotherapy but did not change
significantly from the middle of chemotherapy to the end of chemotherapy. Byar et al 27
analyzed 25 women, with stage I-II breast cancer before and after receiving
doxorubicin-based chemotherapy, fatigue levels were moderately intense during
treatments and did not rise with subsequent treatments. Payne et al 28 assessed
fatigue in four measurement points (during cycles 1 and 4 on days 1–3 and at
the two-week nadir points). The mean changes in fatigue scores did not differ
significantly between cycles 1 and 4. Interestingly, no progressive increase in fatigue
score was found over the course of the four cycles of chemotherapy.
However, Berger and Higginbotham 29 studied in a pilot study with 14 breast
cancer patients, with stage I or II, during and after doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide
chemotherapy, patients experienced the highest levels of fatigue and symptom
distress during the first four days after treatment 3 of chemotherapy. Kumar et al 30
studied 198 consecutive breast cancer patients receiving adjuvant chemotherapy,
who were monitored from start to end of chemotherapy. Ninety four percent
(94%) of all patients reported increased frequency of fatigue at end of treatment,
compared to 42% at start of treatment as measured by the Fatigue Symptom
Scale. Liu et al 31 showed in 63 women with stage I–IIIA breast cancer in four
cycles of adjuvant or neoadjuvant anthracycline-based chemotherapy that fatigue
significantly increased from baseline to cycle 1. Fatigue of cycle 4 was significantly
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higher than during baseline and significantly higher than cycle 1. Data was
collected before and during weeks 1, 2, and 3 of cycle 1 and cycle 4.
Our study evaluated fatigue in breast cancer patients that submitted 6
cycles of chemotherapy, and few studies evaluated a fatigue in patients with
more than four cycle of chemotherapy. De Jong et al 32 reported fatigue in a
sample of 157 patients with breast cancer, they were interviewed at the first, third
and fifth cycle of adjuvant chemotherapy. Patients were treated with doxorubicin-
containing schedule, or cyclophosphamide, methotrexate and 5-fluorouracil
(CMF). After the start of chemotherapy, a direct increase in fatigue was seen in
the doxorubicin group, whereas the increase in the CMF group does not show
until after the fifth cycle of chemotherapy. The fatigue experienced at the first
and the last measurements do not differ significantly. In another study of De
Jong et al 33 course of mental fatigue and motivation varied, but seemed to be
stable during the treatment of chemotherapy. In Zachariae et al 34 study fatigue
was measured before 1st cycle of chemotherapy, at 4, 6, and last cycle. The
women reported significant increases in fatigue during treatment with increased
fatigue found after all subsequent cycles compared to cycle 1.
To determine if there are differences in neoadjuvant versus adjuvant
chemotherapy in the sample, we found that FACT-G scores in neoadjuvant patients
were slightly higher than in adjuvant patients, and the same was with fatigue
subscale score (not significant). FACT-G scores in neoadjuvant group significantly
decreased after cycle 6. In adjuvant patients FACT-G scores decreased after
cycle 3 and returned to the same value compared with before chemotherapy.
Fatigue score in neoadjuvant and adjuvant patients decreased significantly
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compared with before chemotherapy. Reason for the increased fatigue in patients
before the start of chemotherapy was the physical and psychological stress
associated with those having recently undergone breast cancer surgery 25.
In this study, our sample received only cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and
fluorouracil (CAF) chemotherapy regimens. The differences in chemotherapy
regimens on the course of fatigue are unclear. Berger and Walker35 found that
chemotherapy protocols which contain intravenous doxorubicin were directly
associated with higher fatigue at the first chemotherapy treatment. De Jong et al 32
reported that the course of fatigue during and after chemotherapy treatment was
significantly different for the CMF group, compared with the doxorubicin group.
Jacobsen et al 25 concluded that fatigue was not influenced by the chemotherapy
regimens (doxorubicin, doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide (AC), CAF, or doxorubicin,
cyclophosphamide, and methotrexate). And a similar result was found in Liu et
al study 31 that reported no significant differences with different chemotherapy
with AC; CAF; AC plus docetaxel; AC plus paclitaxel; with cyclophosphamide,
epirubicin, and fluorouracil (CEF) regimens in any of the analyses. Fatigue
scores were significantly higher in women on 28-day chemotherapy cycles
(CAF, CMF) than in women on 21-day cycles at the midpoints of the first and
third treatments, but not at the second midpoint 23.
In the present study, Fatigue subscale showed a moderate Pearson’s
correlation coefficient with FACT-G after cycle 3 and cycle 6 (r= 0.75, p< 0.001).
Pearson’s correlations coefficient with fatigue subscale and physical well-being
subscale was excellent after cycle 3 (r=0.81, p< 0.001) and r=0.87 (p< 0.001)
after cycle 6. This high relation with fatigue and the physical well-being during
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chemotherapy showed that as low was the physical condition, worst is the fatigue,
increasing the correlation after cycles 3 and 6 of chemotherapy. A moderated to
good correlation (r=0.50-0.75) showed for fatigue subscale and functional well-being
to time before chemotherapy and an increase at cycle 3 and 6 of chemotherapy
indicated that fatigue interferes in daily activities during chemotherapy.
Findings were also consistent with literature that reported that women’s
higher fatigue is related to lower HRQOL15, 36, 37, 27. Fatigue was correlated with
greater symptom distress 29 emotional domain and mental domain27, poorer
physical 27, 29, 36 , social health status 29, health 38 and functioning subscale 32, 35,
36, 38. This included difficulty to start and finish tasks, to be too tired to act,
needing help with activity, and frustration 36. Compared to women with no history of
cancer, women receiving chemotherapy reported that fatigue interfered to a greater
extent with their general activity, ability to bathe and dress, normal work activity,
ability to concentrate, relations with others, enjoyment of life, and mood25.
The association between fatigue and impaired physical functioning can be
explained in a number of ways. Patients who feel exhausted probably reduce their
physical activity in order to minimize their discomfort. Indeed, reduced activity is
one of the ways in which individuals gauge the severity of their fatigue39.
This study showed a weak correlation (r=0.25-0.50) for fatigue subscale
and emotional well-being to time before chemotherapy an increase at cycles 3 and 6
of chemotherapy indicated that fatigue was related with emotional symptoms
during chemotherapy. There were no significant changes in correlation between
fatigue and social/family well being during chemotherapy. Social and emotional
well-being are very important to quality of life, they are not as likely to change as
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quickly or dramatically over time or in response to physical health interventions
such as pharmaceutical treatments in clinical trials14.
Although many cancer studies have examined fatigue during and after
chemotherapy, only a small number evaluated the association between smoking
and fatigue 40, 41. The results of the current study also showed that fatigue
subscale score in smoking patients decreased significantly from before and after
6 cycle of chemotherapy.
In this study the FACT-G score before and after chemotherapy in
active/very active patients was slightly higher compared to sedentary/insufficiently
active patients (no statistical significance). In contrast fatigue subscale score in
sedentary/insufficiently active patients decreased significantly more than in
active/very active patients. Researchers have found that women who report less
physical activity during or after treatment report greater levels of fatigue 23, 29.
Reduced activity may itself contribute to the development of fatigue via the
mechanism of deconditioning 42.
Fatigue intensity should be monitored closely by health professionals, and
patients need to know that fatigue can compromise their quality of life. Efforts should
be aimed at the development and evaluation of interventions to reduce or minimize
the impact of chemotherapy on fatigue, other symptoms, and QOL. Likewise,
there is growing evidence that interventions designed to increase activity levels have
had beneficial effects on fatigue in cancer patients 43. In terms of interventions,
physical therapists can teach patients management strategies such as how to
schedule treatments, plan realistically for periods of rests, and seek support from
family when needed 44 . The reason why only some patients develop significant
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fatigue is not known. Physical exercise programs have been shown to be
effective in reducing the cancer-related fatigue 45, 46, 47.
Strength of the current study is its longitudinal design, repeated assessments
during the course of chemotherapy, and breast cancer patients received only
one chemotherapy regimens (CAF) for 6 cycles. However, we assessed fatigue
three times, and data was collected in different days, before chemotherapy, between
3 and 4 cycles, and after cycle 6. This assessment schedule may have obscured
more meaningful day-to-day fluctuations in fatigue.
CONCLUSION
There was a significant decrease in mean FACT-F, fatigue subscale,
FACT-G, physical well-being scores between the start of the treatment and after
cycle 3 and then appeared a plateau at cycle 6 reflecting maintenance in fatigue
symptoms and lower quality of life in breast cancer patients during 6 cycles of
CAF chemotherapy in our Institute. Fatigue was related to lower HRQOL. Fatigue
subscale score in smoking patients decreased significantly comparing before and
after cycle 6 of chemotherapy. FACT-G score before and after chemotherapy in
active/very active patients was higher compared to sedentary/insufficiently
active patients (no statistical significance). In contrast fatigue subscale score
in sedentary/insufficiently active patients decreased significantly more than
active/very active patients.
The study results provide directions for assessment and monitoring
fatigue in breast cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors are grateful to Mr. Ben Arnold and Ms. Helen Morrow for
permission to use the instrument FACT-F in this study and for having provided
the questionnaire in Portuguese language. Finally, we are grateful to all patients
who participated in the study.
AUTHORS’ DISCLOSURES OF POTENTIAL CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
Authors wish to disclose the absence of financial support and off-label or
investigational use of drugs or devices for this study. The authors indicated no
potential conflicts of interest.
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Table 1. Demographic and Clinical Characteristics of Study Sample (n= 157) Sample Characteristics N % Age
Mean ± SD (range) 49.0 ±8.6 (30-69) Race/Ethnicity
White 84 53.5 Black 28 17.8 Mulatto 45 28.7
Marital Status Married 79 50.3 Separated/Divorced 25 15.9 Single 39 24.8 Widowed 14 8.9
Educational Level = 8 Year 90 57.3 9-11 Years 50 31.8 > 11 Years 17 10.8
Stage of Disease at Diagnosis IIA 16 10.2 IIB 35 22.3 IIIA 30 19.1 IIIB 76 48.4
Performance Status 0 (fully ambulatory without physical symptoms) 47 29.9 1 (fully ambulatory with some symptoms) 108 68.8 2 (requiring <50% awake time to rest) 2 1.3
Treatment Surgery Mastectomy 38 24.2 Lumpectomy 20 12.7 No Surgery 99 63.1 Chemotherapy Adjuvant 58 37.6 Neoadjuvant 99 62.4
Smoking History (tobacco habits) Non-Smoker 104 66.2 Former Smoker 34 21.7 Current Smoker 19 12.1
Levels of Physical Activity Sedentary 131 83.4 Insufficiently Active 10 6.4 Active 9 5.7 Very Active 7 4.5
Body Mass Index (Kg/m2) Mean ± SD (range) 28.1 ±5.0 (16.6-41.2)
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Table 2. FACT-F and Subscales Scores Before Chemotherapy, and After Cycle 3 and 6 (N=157)
Abbreviations: FACT-F= Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Fatigue; FACT-G= Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General; SD= Standard Deviation.
Note: higher scores represent better function. Test statistics= Wilcoxon Signed Ranks Test, *before versus after cycle 3, ** after cycle 3 versus after 6, *** before versus after cycle 6. a=statistically significant results are bold.
Before Chemo (A)
After Cycle 3 (B)
p Value (AXB)
After Cycle 6 (C)
p Value** (BXC)
p Value*** (AXC)
Mean (SD) Range Mean (SD) Range Mean (SD) Range FACT-F (0-160)
126.8 (14.8)
81-159
118.3 (22.4)
19-156
<0.001a
118.5 (24.1)
38-154
0.849
<0.001a
Fatigue subscale (0-52 )
45.8 (4.9) 21-52 39.7 (9.8) 1-52 <0.001a 39.6 (10.8) 4-52 0.586 <0.001a
FACT-G (0-108)
81.1 (11.4) 53-107 78.6 (14.0) 18-104 0.029a 78.9 (14.9) 25-102 0,698 0.151
Physical well being (0-28)
24.3 (3.3) 12-28 20.4 (5.7) 0-28 <0.001a 21.3 (5.6) 3-28 0.108 <0.001a
Social/family well being (0-28)
20.8 (4.1) 6-28 20.9 (4.2) 6-28 0.839 20.4 (4.3) 5-28 0.055 0.194
Emotional well being (0-24)
17.8 (4.2) 4-24 19.7 (3.5) 6-24 <0.001a 19.7 (3.7) 4-24 0.802 <0.001a
Functional well being (0-28)
18.1 (4.5) 6-28 17.7 (4.7) 2-28 0.116 17.6 (4.9) 3-28 0.999 0.260
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Figure 1. Fatigue Subscale and FACT-G Before Chemotherapy and After Cycle 3 and Cycle 6, for Physical Activity
16141 16141 16141N =
Physical Activity
Active/Very ActiveSedentary/Ins Active
FACT
-G S
core
95%
CI
100
95
90
85
80
75
70
65
60
*
16141 16141 16141N =
Physical Activity
Active/Very ActiveSedentary/Ins Active
Fatig
ue
Subs
cale
95%
CI
60
55
50
45
40
35
30
BeforeChemotherapy
After cycle 3
After cycle 6
* ***
*
16141 16141 16141N =
Physical Activity
Active/Very ActiveSedentary/Ins Active
FACT
-G S
core
95%
CI
100
95
90
85
80
75
70
65
60
*
16141 16141 16141N =
Physical Activity
Active/Very ActiveSedentary/Ins Active
Fatig
ue
Subs
cale
95%
CI
60
55
50
45
40
35
30
BeforeChemotherapy
After cycle 3
After cycle 6
* ***
*
16141 16141 16141N =
Physical Activity
Active/Very ActiveSedentary/Ins Active
Fatig
ue
Subs
cale
95%
CI
60
55
50
45
40
35
30
BeforeChemotherapy
After cycle 3
After cycle 6
* ***
*
Abbreviations: FACT-G = Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General. Test statistics= Wilcoxon Signed Ranks Test. Statistically significant= *before versus after cycle 3, ** after cycle 3 versus after 6, *** before versus after cycle 6.
Publicações 105
Figure 2. Fatigue Subscale and FACT-G Before Neoadjuvant/Adjuvant Chemotherapy, and After Cycle 3 and Cycle 6
5899 5899 5899N =
Chemoterapy
AdjuvantNeoadjuvant
FACT
-G S
core
s95
% C
I
86
84
82
80
78
76
74
725899 5899 5899N =
Chemotherapy
AdjuvantNeoadjuvant
Fatig
ue
Subs
cale
95%
CI
50
48
46
44
42
40
38
36
34
Before Chemotherapy
After Cycle 3
After cycle 6
***
******
**
* *
5899 5899 5899N =
Chemoterapy
AdjuvantNeoadjuvant
FACT
-G S
core
s95
% C
I
86
84
82
80
78
76
74
725899 5899 5899N =
Chemoterapy
AdjuvantNeoadjuvant
FACT
-G S
core
s95
% C
I
86
84
82
80
78
76
74
725899 5899 5899N =
Chemotherapy
AdjuvantNeoadjuvant
Fatig
ue
Subs
cale
95%
CI
50
48
46
44
42
40
38
36
34
Before Chemotherapy
After Cycle 3
After cycle 6
***
******
**
* *
5899 5899 5899N =
Chemotherapy
AdjuvantNeoadjuvant
Fatig
ue
Subs
cale
95%
CI
50
48
46
44
42
40
38
36
34
Before Chemotherapy
After Cycle 3
After cycle 6
***
******
**
* *
Abbreviations: FACT-G = Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General. Test statistics= Wilcoxon Signed Ranks Test. Statistically significant= *before versus after cycle 3, ** after cycle 3 versus after 6, *** before versus after cycle 6.
Discussão 107
4. Discussão
A disponibilidade do FACT-F validado em língua portuguesa é relevante
quanto aos aspectos científicos na área de pesquisa, uma vez que possibilita avaliar
a fadiga e qualidade de vida em pacientes com câncer em relação à prevalência,
incidência, resposta a diversas intervenções, evolução da doença, comparar os
resultados com outros países, e auxiliar no planejamento de políticas públicas
com implicações na saúde, nos aspectos social e econômico. O presente estudo
contribui para que os profissionais de saúde no Brasil possam utilizar este
instrumento para estabelecer estratégias centradas nas necessidades reais dos
pacientes, uma vez que é de fácil aplicação e de fácil entendimento pelo paciente.
Os resultados desta pesquisa sobre a avaliação da fadiga e qualidade de
vida relacionada à saúde em mulheres com câncer de mama submetidas à
quimioterapia no Instituto Nacional de Câncer possibilitou obter informações para se
poder intervir na melhora da qualidade de vida dessas mulheres e sobretudo nos
cuidados e monitoramento da fadiga. Isso possibilitará aos profissionais de saúde
prevenir, minimizar, reduzir e tratar os efeitos colaterais de curto e longo prazo,
Discussão 108
decorrentes dos tratamentos neoadjuvante e adjuvante que influenciam nas
atividades diárias, e assim definir em qual período as estratégias de intervenções no
tratamento devem ser realizadas, principalmente em relação à necessidade de
reabilitação. Este questionário de avaliação de fadiga e da qualidade de vida
pode ser incorporado na prática diária dos profissionais de saúde, permitindo
uma avaliação global do paciente e a identificação de suas necessidades.
É necessário dar informações ao paciente e aos cuidadores sobre a
fadiga desde o começo do tratamento, com relação às opções de controle da
fadiga, e orientar quanto à importância de informar aos profissionais de saúde
sobre os sintomas (Cella et al., 1998). A equipe para intervenção da fadiga deve
incluir médicos, enfermeiros, fisioterapeutas, terapeutas ocupacionais, nutricionistas
e psicólogos (Dillon e Kelly, 2003).
A fadiga é multifatorial e as estratégias para gerenciar a fadiga envolvem
modalidades combinadas. A intervenção para fadiga inclui as ações farmacológicas
com agentes hematopoiéticos (epoetin alfa ou darbepoetin alfa) psicoestimulantes,
corticosteróide e antidepressivos (Carroll et al., 2007). As intervenções não
farmacológicas incluem educação do paciente, conservação de energia, modificar
padrões de atividade e sono, exercícios físicos, intervenção psicológica, terapia
cognitiva, adequada nutrição e hidratação (Portenoy e Itri, 1999; Berger, 2003).
Atualmente existem dados insuficientes para recomendar qualquer tipo
específico de terapia complementar e alternativa para a fadiga relacionada ao
câncer. Entretanto as terapias complementares e alternativas como a
Discussão 109
acupuntura e a massagem devem ser estudadas em ensaios clínicos aleatórios
(Sood et al., 2007).
Portanto, o FACT-F é um instrumento que permitirá sua aplicação em
outros estudos brasileiros, possibilitando comparações dos resultados de avaliações
e intervenções com outros estudos realizados, inclusive de outros países.
Entretanto, é importante lembrar que, por se tratar de instrumento cujos autores
detêm direitos autorais, deve ser solicitada autorização prévia à sua utilização.
Conclusões 111
5. Conclusões
O instrumento FACT-F apresentou uma boa reprodutibilidade teste-
reteste em uma série heterogênea de pacientes, com diferentes tipos de
câncer, performance status e estadiamento.
A versão na língua portuguesa do FACT-F apresentou uma alta
consistência interna, bem como a validade convergente e discriminante para
avaliar a fadiga e qualidade de vida em pacientes com câncer.
As mulheres com câncer de mama em quimioterapia apresentaram uma
diminuição significativa nas médias dos escores do FACT-F, FACT-G e na
subescala fadiga e bem-estar físico após o terceiro ciclo de quimioterapia
quando comparado com os escores antes do início da quimioterapia, e a
diminuição da fadiga e qualidade de vida permanece como um platô até após o
6º ciclo de quimioterapia. A fadiga está relacionada a menor qualidade de
vida relacionada à saúde. A subescala fadiga em fumantes diminuiu
significativamente comparada com os escores antes e depois de 6 ciclos de
quimioterapia. Os escores do FACT-G antes e depois da quimioterapia em
Conclusões 112
pacientes ativos e muito ativos são maiores em comparação com pacientes
sedentários e insuficientemente ativos (embora não tenha havido significância
estatística). A fadiga aumentou significativamente nos pacientes sedentários e
insuficientemente ativos, mais do que nos pacientes ativos e muito ativos.
Portanto, o FACT-F é um instrumento válido e confiável para avaliar a
QV e fadiga, e permitirá que seja aplicado em outros estudos brasileiros
possibilitando comparações dos resultados de avaliações e intervenções com
outros estudos realizados inclusive de outros países. Entretanto, é importante
lembrar que, por se tratar de instrumento cujos autores detêm direitos autorais,
deve ser solicitada autorização prévia à sua utilização.
Referências Bibliográficas 113
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Anexos 119
7. Anexos
7.1. Anexo 1 – Metodo
Primeiramente foi avaliada a reprodutibilidade do questionário Functional
Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Fatigue (FACT-F) através do teste-reteste para
a língua portuguesa em pacientes com câncer.
O estudo foi prospectivo. O tamanho da amostra para este tipo de estudo é
de pelo menos 50 sujeitos (Scientific Advisory Committee of the Medical Outcomes
Trust, 2002; Hopkins, 2000), que é o mínimo recomendado para estudos de
reprodutibilidade teste-reteste. Foram incluídos 85 pacientes neste estudo de
reprodutibilidade teste-reteste. A reprodutibilidade das informações dos questionários,
no presente estudo, foi analisada por meio de dois procedimentos estatísticos:
coeficiente de correlação intraclasse (CCI) entre os valores obtidos nas duas
medidas (teste-reteste) e diagrama de dispersão proposto por Bland-Altman, no
qual foram comparadas graficamente as diferenças entre os valores obtidos no
teste e no reteste do FACT-F (FACTFteste – FACTFreteste) com as médias das duas
avaliações [(FACTFteste + FACTFreteste) /2]. Como limite de concordância no
Anexos 120
diagrama de Bland-Altman, considerou-se duas vezes o desvio-padrão da média das
diferenças entre os resultados (Bland e Altman, 1983; Bland e Altman, 1986). Além
disso, foi calculado o coeficiente de correlação de Pearson, visando a comparar os
resultados obtidos com os do artigo original de validação do FACT-F para a
língua inglesa. Os coeficientes de correlação de Pearson foram classificados como:
0-0,25 não correlacionado; 0,25-0,50 correlação fraca; 0,50-0,75 correlação
moderada a boa; >0,75 correlação muito boa a excelente (Colton, 1974). O CCI
pode variar de 0 a +1, neste caso indicando uma alta reprodutibilidade,
enquanto CCI=0 indica nenhuma reprodutibilidade (Szklo e Nieto, 2000).
Para a validação do questionário foram incluídos mais 185 pacientes
além dos 85 pacientes do teste-reteste, assim totalizando 270 sujeitos em
tratamento quimioterápico por câncer. O tamanho mínimo da amostra sugerida
para estabelecer a validade de uma escala é de 3 a 20 vezes o número de
variáveis do instrumento (Mundfrom et al., 2005). A confiabilidade foi avaliada pela
consistência interna e reprodutibilidade. A validade convergente foi analisada
através da correlação entre o FACT-F e SF-36. A validade discriminante da
FACT-F avaliou a habilidade da escala em discriminar pacientes segundo a
ECOG Performance Status, e diferentes estádios da doença.
Após a validação, o questionário foi utilizado no estudo para avaliar a
fadiga e qualidade de vida em mulheres com câncer de mama estádios II e III que
foram indicadas para receber no mínimo seis ciclos de quimioterapia neoadjuvante
ou adjuvante com fluoracil, adriamicina, ciclofosfamida. O FACT-F foi aplicado
antes da quimioterapia e após terceiro e sexto ciclo de quimioterapia.
Anexos 121
Para o cálculo do tamanho da amostra, partiu-se do pressuposto de que
a diferença mínima estimada a ser encontrada para o escore de fadiga antes da
quimioterapia e após quimioterapia seria de 3 (Cella, et al., 2002; Webster et al.,
2003), obtendo-se tamanho mínimo da amostra para identificar essa diferença
que foi de 127 mulheres, considerando um erro tipo ? de 0,05 e erro tipo ? de
0,20 (Lachin, 1981). Para avaliar a qualidade de vida das mulheres com câncer de
mama, partindo do pressuposto de que a diferença mínima estimada encontrada
para o escore de qualidade de vida antes da quimioterapia e após quimioterapia
seria de 5 (Webster et al., 2003; Eton et al., 2004), o tamanho mínimo da
amostra para identificar essa diferença foi de 143 mulheres, considerando um
erro ? de 0,05 e erro ? de 0,20 (Lachin, 1981). Portanto, a amostra para avaliar
fadiga e qualidade de vida em mulheres antes da quimioterapia e após a
quimioterapia para este estudo foi de 143 mulheres.
O teste de Wilcoxon foi realizado para avaliar as diferenças entre antes
do início do ciclo, e após terceiro e sexto ciclos de quimioterapia, e para comparar
grupos de pacientes entre a quimioterapia neoadjuvante versus adjuvante. O
coeficiente de correlação de Pearson foi utilizado para analisar a relação entre a
subescala fadiga e o escore do FACT-G total e nos diferentes domínios. O
pacote estatístico Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) versão
13.0 foi utilizado para todas as análises estatísticas.
Anexos 122
7.2. Anexo 2 – Carta de Autorização do FACT
De:"Helen Morrow" <hmorrow@facit.org>
Para:<nelimuraki@globo.com>
Assunto:Re: Re: Brazilian validation FACT F
Data:Tue, 1 Mar 2005 08:55:02 –0600 Anexos: FACT-G_v4_por_final_30May01.doc [ abrir ]
FACT-G_v4_por_final_30May01.doc [ abrir ] FACT-G_v4_por_final_30May01.doc [ abrir ] FACT-G_v4_por_final_30May01.doc [ abrir ] FACT-G_v4_por_final_30May01.doc [ abrir ] FACT-G_v4_por_final_30May01.pdf [ abrir ] ScoringFACT-G v4-REVISED.doc [ abrir ] Administration Guidelines.doc [ abrir ] FACIT-F_POR_Final_Ver4_28Nov01.pdf [ abrir ] FACIT-F_POR_Final_Ver4_28Nov01.doc [ abrir ] ScoringFACIT-F v4-REVISED.doc [ abrir ]
Hello Neli Muraki Ishikawa: Thank you for completing the Translation Request form. After reviewing your request, and speaking with Ben Arnold, Manager of the Translation Project, he has granted you permission to use the FACT-G and FACIT-F in Portuguese (as originally requested) for this study only, waiving the standard licensing fee normally associated with the use of translated questionnaires. I have attached a copy of the most current version of the FACT-G and FACIT-F questionnaire (Version 4) in Portuguese for your review and possible use. With your agreement to a few simple requests, we ask that you review our user's agreement that can be found on our website at www.facit.org (See Requests & Registration: User's Agreement). Should you actually decide to include the questionnaire in your research, we would also request that you take the time to complete a Collaborator's Project Information Form on line to submit for our files. We are in the process of updating our website, so, many areas of the site are under construction. We appreciate your patience as we continue to create an efficient and user friendly site. Please keep in mind that the questionnaire has a copyright attached and can not be altered without strict permission from Ben Arnold. I have attached the scoring and administration guidelines as well as the raw scoring template for the FACT-G and FACIT-F. The raw scoring templates will eventually be available on our new website; however, a fee will be associated with this downloadable form. These documents are only available in English. During this transition, we will not be charging a fee. I hope you will find this information useful. If you have additional questions, please do not hesitate to contact me again. Thank you, Helen A. Morrow, MA Manager, Business Operations www.facit.org hmorrow@facit.org
Anexos 123
7.3. Anexo 3 – Parecer do Comitê de Ética em Pesquisa do INCA
Anexos 124
7.4. Anexo 4 –Termo de Consentimento Livre e Esclarecido (Validação do questionário FACT-F)
Anexos 125
Anexos 126
Anexos 127
7.5. Anexo 5 –Termo de Consentimento Livre e Esclarecido (Avaliação da fadiga e qualidade de vida em mulheres com câncer de mama)
Anexos 128
Anexos 129
Anexos 130
7.6. Anexo 6 – Características Sociodemográficas (Validação do FACT-F)
Data: / / número: I__I__I__I
Nome:
Telefone: matricula: I__I__I__I__I__I__I__I
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Data: / / número: I__I__I__I
DADOS SOCIODEMOGRÁFICOS
• Idade: I__I__I anos
• Sexo: I__I masculino I__I feminino
• Estado civil: I__I casada I__I desquitada ou separada I__I divorciada I__I viúva I__I solteira
• Cor: I__I branca I__I preta I__I amarela I__I parda I__I indígena
• Escolaridade: I__I alfabetização de adultos I__I antigo primário I__I antigo ginásio I__I antigo clássico ou científico I__I ensino fundamental ou 1° grau I__I ensino médio ou 2° grau superior mestrado ou doutorado I__I nenhum
• Fumante (mais de 100 cigarros): I__I sim I__I não I__I Fumante atual I__I Ex fumante
• Atividade física: I__I sedentário I__I insuficientemente ativo I__I muito ativo I__I ativo
CARACTERÍSTICAS DA DOENÇA
Câncer (tipo):
Estádio: I__I 0 I__I I I__I II I__I III I__I III I__I IV
Performance Status: I__I 0 I__I 1 I__I 2 I__I 3 I__I 4
Cirurgia: I__I sim I__I não
Radioterapia: I__I sim I__I não
Quimioterapia: I__I adjuvante I__I neoadjuvante I__I recidiva/paliativa
Hormonioterapia: I__I sim I__I não
Índice de massa corporal: I__I__I,I__I Peso I__I__I__I,I__I Kg Altura I__I,I__I__I m
I__I abaixo do peso (<18,5) I__I peso ideal (18,5-24,9)
I__I pré obesidade (25-29,9) I__I obesidade I (30-34,9)
I__I obesidade II (35-39,9) I__I obesidade III (= 40)
Anexos 131
7.7. Anexo 7 – Características Sociodemográficas (Avaliação de fadiga e qualidade de vida em mulheres com câncer de mama)
Data: / / número: I__I__I__I
Nome:
Telefone: matricula: I__I__I__I__I__I__I__I
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Data: / / número: I__I__I__I
DADOS SOCIODEMOGRÁFICOS
• Idade: I__I__I anos
• Sexo: I__I masculino I__I feminino
• Estado civil: I__I casada I__I desquitada ou separada I__I divorciada I__I viúva I__I solteira
• Cor: I__I branca I__I preta I__I amarela I__I parda I__I indígena
• Escolaridade: I__I alfabetização de adultos I__I antigo primário I__I antigo ginásio I__I antigo clássico ou científico I__I ensino fundamental ou 1° grau I__I ensino médio ou 2° grau superior mestrado ou doutorado I__I nenhum
• Fumante (mais de 100 cigarros): I__I sim I__I não I__I Fumante atual I__I Ex fumante
• Atividade física: I__I sedentário I__I insuficientemente ativo I__I muito ativo I__I ativo
CARACTERÍSTICAS DA DOENÇA
Estádio: I__I 0 I__I I I__I II A I__I II B I__I III A I__I III B I__I IV
Cirurgia: I__I tumorectomia/quadrantectomia I__I mastectomia simples ou total
I__I mastectomia radical modificada I__I mastectomia radical
I__I mastectomia com reconstrução imediata
• Antes do 1° ciclo de quimioterapia Data: / /
Performance Status: I__I 0 I__I 1 I__I 2 I__I 3 I__I 4
Índice de massa corporal: I__I__I,I__I Peso I__I__I__I,I__I Kg Altura I__I,I__I__I m
I__I abaixo do peso (<18,5) I__I peso ideal (18,5-24,9)
I__I pré obesidade (25-29,9) I__I obesidade I (30-34,9)
I__I obesidade II (35-39,9) I__I obesidade III (= 40)
Anexos 132
• Depois do 3° ciclo de quimioterapia Data: / /
Performance Status: I__I 0 I__I 1 I__I 2 I__I 3 I__I 4
Índice de massa corporal: I__I__I,I__I Peso I__I__I__I,I__I Kg Altura I__I,I__I__I m
I__I abaixo do peso (<18,5) I__I peso ideal (18,5-24,9)
I__I pré obesidade (25-29,9) I__I obesidade I (30-34,9)
I__I obesidade II (35-39,9) I__I obesidade III (= 40)
• Depois do 6° ciclo de quimioterapia Data: / /
Performance Status: I__I 0 I__I 1 I__I 2 I__I 3 I__I 4
Índice de massa corporal: I__I__I,I__I Peso I__I__I__I,I__I Kg Altura I__I,I__I__I m
I__I abaixo do peso (<18,5) I__I peso ideal (18,5-24,9)
I__I pré obesidade (25-29,9) I__I obesidade I (30-34,9)
I__I obesidade II (35-39,9) I__I obesidade III (= 40)
Anexos 133
7.8. Anexo 8 – FACT- F Versão 4
Abaixo encontrará uma lista de afirmações que outras pessoas com a sua doença disseram ser importantes. Por favor, faça um círculo em torno do número que melhor corresponda ao seu estado durante os últimos 7 dias.
BEM-ESTAR FÍSICO
Nem um pouco
Um pouco
Mais ou menos Muito
Muitís-simo
GP1 Estou sem energia 0 1 2 3 4
GP2 Fico enjoado (a) 0 1 2 3 4
GP3 Por causa do meu estado físico, tenho dificuldade em atender às necessidades da minha família
0 1 2 3 4
GP4 Tenho dores 0 1 2 3 4
GP5 Sinto-me incomodado (a) pelos efeitos secundários do tratamento
0 1 2 3 4
GP6 Sinto-me doente 0 1 2 3 4
GP7 Tenho que me deitar durante o dia 0 1 2 3 4
BEM-ESTAR SOCIAL/FAMILIAR Nem um pouco
Um pouco
Mais ou menos Muito
Muitís-simo
GS1 Sinto que tenho uma boa relação com os meus amigos 0 1 2 3 4
GS2 Recebo apoio emocional da minha família 0 1 2 3 4
GS3 Recebo apoio dos meus amigos 0 1 2 3 4
GS4 A minha família aceita a minha doença 0 1 2 3 4
GS5 Estou satisfeito (a) com a maneira como a minha família fala sobre a minha doença 0 1 2 3 4
GS6 Sinto-me próximo (a) do(a) meu (minha) parceiro(a) (ou da pessoa que me dá maior apoio) 0 1 2 3 4
Q1 Independentemente do seu nível atual de atividade sexual, favor responder à pergunta a seguir. Se preferir não responder, assinale o quadrículo [ ] e passe para a próxima seção
GS7 Estou satisfeito (a) com a minha vida sexual 0 1 2 3 4
Anexos 134
FACT-Fatigue (Versão 4)
Por favor, faça um círculo em torno do número que melhor corresponda ao seu estado durante os últimos 7 dias
BEM-ESTAR EMOCIONAL
Nem um pouco
Um pouco
Mais ou menos Muito
Muitís-simo
GE1 Sinto-me triste 0 1 2 3 4
GE2 Estou satisfeito (a) com a maneira como enfrento a minha doença.
0 1 2 3 4
GE3 Estou perdendo a esperança na luta contra a minha doença
0 1 2 3 4
GE4 Sinto-me nervoso (a) 0 1 2 3 4
GE5 Estou preocupado (a) com a idéia de morrer 0 1 2 3 4
GE6 Estou preocupado (a) que o meu estado venha a piorar
0 1 2 3 4
BEM-ESTAR FUNCIONAL
Nem um pouco
Um pouco
Mais ou menos Muito
Muitís-simo
GF1 Sou capaz de trabalhar (inclusive em casa) 0 1 2 3 4
GF2 Sinto-me realizado (a) com o meu trabalho (inclusive em casa)
0 1 2 3 4
GF3 Sou capaz de sentir prazer em viver 0 1 2 3 4
GF4 Aceito a minha doença 0 1 2 3 4
GF5 Durmo bem 0 1 2 3 4
GF6 Gosto das coisas que normalmente faço para me divertir
0 1 2 3 4
GF7 Estou satisfeito (a) com a qualidade da minha vida neste momento
0 1 2 3 4
Anexos 135
FACT-Fatigue (Versão 4)
Por favor, faça um círculo em torno do número que melhor corresponda ao seu estado durante os últimos 7 dias
PREOCUPAÇÕES ADICIONAIS
Nem um pouco
Um pouco
Mais ou menos Muito
Muitís-simo
HI 7 Sinto-me fatigado (a) 0 1 2 3 4
HI 12 Sinto fraqueza generalizada 0 1 2 3 4
An 1 Sinto-me sem forças 0 1 2 3 4
An 2 Sinto-me cansado (a) 0 1 2 3 4
An 3 Tenho dificuldade em começar as coisas porque estou cansado (a)
0 1 2 3 4
An 4 Tenho dificuldade em acabar as coisas porque estou cansado(a)
0 1 2 3 4
An 5 Tenho energia 0 1 2 3 4
An 7 Sou capaz de fazer as minhas atividades normais 0 1 2 3 4
An 8 Preciso (de) dormir durante o dia 0 1 2 3 4
An 12 Estou cansado (a) demais para comer 0 1 2 3 4
An 14 Preciso de ajuda para fazer as minhas atividades normais 0 1 2 3 4
An 15 Estou frustrado (a) por estar cansado (a) demais para fazer as coisas que quero 0 1 2 3 4
An 16 Tenho que limitar as minhas atividades sociais por estar cansado (a) 0 1 2 3 4
Anexos 136
7.9. Anexo 9 – FACIT-F Scoring Guidelines (Version 4) Pages 1
Instructions:* 1. Record answers in "item response" column. If missing, mark with an X 2. Perform reversals as indicated, and sum individual items to obtain a score.
3. Multiply the sum of the item scores by the number of items in the subscale, then divide by the number of items answered. This produces the subscale score.
4. Add subscale scores to derive total scores (TOI, FACT-G & FACIT-F). 5. The higher the score, the better the QOL.
Subscale Item Code Reverse item? Item response Item Score PHYSICAL GP1 4 - ________ =________ WELL-BEING GP2 4 - ________ =________ (PWB) GP3 4 - ________ =________ GP4 4 - ________ =________ GP5 4 - ________ =________ GP6 4 - ________ =________ GP7 4 - ________ =________
Sum individual item scores: ________ Multiply by 7: ________
Divide by number of items answered: ________= PWB subscale score
SOCIAL/FAMILY GS1 0 + ________ =________ WELL-BEING GS2 0 + ________ =________ (SWB) GS3 0 + ________ =________ GS4 0 + ________ =________ GS5 0 + ________ =________ GS6 0 + ________ =________ GS7 0 + ________ =________
Sum individual item scores: ________ Multiply by 7: ________
Divide by number of items answered: ________= SWB subscale score EMOTIONAL GE1 4 - ________ =________ WELL-BEING GE2 0 + ________ =________ (FWB) GE3 0 - ________ =________ GE4 0 - ________ =________ GE5 0 - ________ =________ GE6 0 - ________ =________
Sum individual item scores: ________ Multiply by 6: ________
Divide by number of items answered: ________=EWB subscale score FUNCTIONAL GF1 0 + ________ =________ WELL-BEING GF2 0 + ________ =________ (FWB) GF3 0 + ________ =________ GF4 0 + ________ =________ GF5 0 + ________ =________ GF6 0 + ________ =________ GF7 0 + ________ =________
Sum individual item scores: _______ Multiply by 7: ________
Divide by number of items answered: ________=FWB subscale score
Score range: 0-28
Score range: 0-28
Score range: 0-28
Score range: 0-24
Anexos 137
FACIT-F Scoring Guidelines (Version 4) – Page 2 Subscale Item Code Reverse item? Item response Item Score FATIGUE HI7 4 - ________ =________ SUBSCALE HI12 4 - ________ =________ (FS) An1 4 - ________ =________
An2 4 - ________ =________ An3 4 - ________ =________ An4 4 - ________ =________ An5 0 + ________ =________ An7 0 + ________ =________ An8 4 - ________ =________ An12 4 - ________ =________ An14 4 - ________ =________ An15 4 - ________ =________ An16 4 - ________ =________
Sum individual item scores:________
Multiply by 13: ________ Divide by number of items answered: ________=F Subscale score
To Derive a FACT-G total score:
__________ + __________ + __________ +__________ = FACT-G Total score (PWB score) (SWB score) (EWB score) (FWB score)
To Derive a FACIT-F total score:
_________ + __________ + __________ + __________=________=FACT-F Total score
(PWB score) (SWB score) (EWB score) (FWB score) (FS score) *For guidelines on handling missing data and scoring options, please refer to the Administration and Scoring Guidelines in the manual or on-line at www.facit.org
Score range: 0-52
Score range: 0-108
Score range: 0-160
Anexos 138
7.10. Anexo 10 – Questionário de Qualidade de Vida SF-36
Instruções: esta pesquisa questiona você sobre sua saúde. Estas informações nos manterão informados de como você se sente e quão bem você é capaz de realizar suas atividades de vida diária. Responda cada questão marcando a resposta como indicado. Caso você esteja inseguro de como responder, tente fazer melhor que puder.
1. Em geral, você diria que sua saúde é: Excelente ( 1 ) Muito boa ( 2 ) Boa ( 3 ) Ruim ( 4 ) Muito ruim ( 5 )
2. Comparada a um ano atrás, como você classificaria sua saúde em geral, agora? Muito melhor agora do que um ano atrás ( 1 ) Um pouco melhor agora do que um ano atrás ( 2 ) Quase a mesma de um ano atrás ( 3 ) Um pouco pior agora do que um ano atrás ( 4 ) Muito pior agora do que um ano atrás ( 5 )
3. Os seguintes itens são sobre atividades que você poderia fazer atualmente durante um dia comum. Devido à sua saúde, você tem dificuldade para fazer estas atividades? Neste caso, quanto?
Atividades Sim, dificulta muito
Sim dificulta pouco
Não, não dificulta de
modo algum A. atividades vigorosas, que exigem muito
esforço, tais como correr, levantar objetos pesados, participar de esportes árduos...
1 2 3
B. atividades moderadas, tais como mover urna mesa, passar aspirador de pó, jogar bola, varrer a casa...
1 2 3
C. levantar ou carregar mantimentos 1 2 3
D. subir vários lances de escadas 1 2 3
E. subir um lance de escada 1 2 3
F. curvar-se, ajoelhar-se ou dobrar-se 1 2 3
G. andar mais que um quilômetro 1 2 3
H. andar vários quarteirões 1 2 3
I. andar um quarteirão 1 2 3
J. tomar banho ou vestir-se 1 2 3
Anexos 139
4. Durante as últimas 4 semanas você teve algum dos seguintes problemas com o seu trabalho ou com alguma atividade diária regular, como conseqüência de sua saúde física?
Sim Não
A Você diminuiu a quantidade de tempo que dedicava ao seu trabalho ou a outras atividades? 1 2
B. Realizou menos tarefas do que gostaria? 1 2
C. Esteve limitado no seu tipo de trabalho ou em outras atividades? 1 2
D. Teve dificuldade de fazer seu trabalho ou outras atividades (p. ex. necessitou de um esforço extra)? 1 2
5. Durante as últimas 4 semanas você teve algum dos seguintes problemas com o seu trabalho ou outra atividade regular diária, como conseqüência de algum problema emocional (como sentir-se deprimido ou ansioso)?
Sim Não
A. Você diminuiu a quantidade de tempo que dedicava ao seu trabalho ou a outras atividades? 1 2
B. Realizou menos do que você gostaria? 1 2
C. Não trabalhou ou não fez qualquer atividade com tanto cuidado como geralmente faz? 1 2
6. Durante as últimas 4 semanas de que maneira sua saúde física ou problemas emocionais interferiram nas suas atividades sociais normais, em relação à família, vizinhos, amigos ou em grupo?
De forma nenhuma ( 1 ) Ligeiramente ( 2 ) Moderadamente ( 3 ) Bastante ( 4 ) Extremamente ( 5 )
7. Quanta dor no corpo você teve durante as últimas quatro semanas? Nenhuma ( 1 ) Muito leve ( 2 ) Leve ( 3 ) Moderada ( 4 ) Grave ( 5 ) Muito Grave ( 6 )
8. Durante as últimas 4 semanas quanto a dor interferiu em seu trabalho normal (incluindo tanto o trabalho fora como dentro de casa)?
De maneira nenhuma ( 1 ) Um pouco ( 2 ) Moderadamente ( 3 ) Bastante ( 4 ) Extremamente ( 5 )
Anexos 140
9. Estas questões são como você se sente, e como tudo tem acontecido com você durante as últimas 4 semanas. Para cada questão dê uma resposta que mais se aproxime da maneira como você se sente.
Todo tempo
A maior parte do tempo
Uma boa parte do tempo
Alguma parte do tempo
Uma pequena parte do tempo Nunca
A. Quanto tempo você tem se sentido cheio de vigor, cheio de vontade, cheio de força?
1 2 3 4 5 6
B. Quanto tempo você tem se sentido uma pessoa muito nervosa? 1 2 3 4 5 6
C. Quanto tempo você tem se sentido tão deprimido que nada possa animá-lo?
1 2 3 4 5 6
D.Quanto tempo você tem se sentido calmo ou tranqüilo? 1 2 3 4 5 6
E. Quanto tempo você tem se sentido com muita energia? 1 2 3 4 5 6
F. Quanto tempo você tem se sentido desanimado e abatido? 1 2 3 4 5 6
G Quanto tempo você tem se sentido esgotado? 1 2 3 4 5 6
H. Quanto tempo você tem se sentido uma pessoa feliz? 1 2 3 4 5 6
I. Quanto tempo você tem se sentido cansado? 1 2 3 4 5 6
10. Durante as últimas 4 semanas, quanto de seu tempo a sua saúde física ou problemas emocionais interferiram em suas atividades sociais (como visitar amigos, parentes, etc.)?
Todo o tempo (1) A maior parte do tempo (2) Alguma parte do tempo (3) Uma pequena parte do tempo (4) Nenhuma parte do tempo (5)
11. O quanto verdadeiro ou falso é cada uma das afirmações para você?
Definitiva-mente
verdadeiro
A maioria das vezes verdadeiro
Não sei A maioria das vezes
falsa
Definitiva mente falsa
A. Eu costumo adoecer um pouco mais facilmente que as outras pessoas 1 2 3 4 5
B. Eu sou tão saudável quanto qualquer pessoa que conheço 1 2 3 4 5
C.Eu acho que minha saúde vai piorar 1 2 3 4 5
D. Minha saúde é excelente 1 2 3 4 5
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